The European Union has launched legal action against AstraZeneca for failing to comply with the terms of its contract with the 27 nation bloc. [Forward to a friend]( | [Subscribe]( | [View in your browser]( [Top of The World]( --------------------------------------------------------------- In the news today The EU sues AstraZeneca, escalating tensions amid the pandemic
[A man receives a COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination center in Belgrade, Serbia, March 21, 2021.]
Credit: Darko Vojinovic/AP/File photo The European Union [has launched legal action]( against pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca for failing to comply with the terms of its contract with the 27-nation bloc, in what the EU has described as delays in the delivery of hundreds of millions of doses of the coronavirus vaccine. AstraZenecaâs contract with the EU pledges the delivery of 300 million doses initially, and an option of a further 100 million. During the first quarter of 2021, the company hoped to deliver 80 million doses, but only 30 million were sent. As a result, the EU alleges AstraZeneca broke the contract, escalating [a long-running dispute](. AstraZeneca said the EUâs legal action, which is backed by all member states, [was without merit]( as it pledged to defend itself in court. âWe are making progress addressing the technical challenges and our output is improving, but the production cycle of a vaccine is very long, which means these improvements take time to result in increased finished vaccine doses,â AstraZeneca said. While the legal spat between the EU and AstraZeneca plays out, the company still has not received approval for its coronavirus vaccine in the US, leaving the country [sitting on a stockpile]( of unused doses. Facing weeks of pressure, the Biden administration announced Monday [plans to share up to 60 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine](with other countries, after a federal safety review. What The World is following Human Rights Watch (HRW) [alleged in a report]( on Tuesday that Israel is guilty of the international crimes of apartheid and persecution against Palestinians within its own borders and in the occupied territories. [HRW claims]( the government enforces an overarching policy to âmaintain the domination by Jewish Israelis over Palestiniansâ in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, coupled with âsystematic oppressionâ and âinhumane acts.â Taken together, HRW argues in its 213-page report that it amounts to the crime of apartheid. Israel has adamantly rejected that characterization. Meanwhile, world powers [resumed high-level talks in Vienna]( on Tuesday in an effort to bring the US back into the nuclear deal with Iran, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Delegations from Iran, along with Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the US, have been meeting in Vienna for several weeks to agree on the steps that would be needed for the US to return to the deal. With no direct talks between the US and Iran, representatives of the five countries shuttle between both sides for negotiations. Iran has rejected direct talks. --------------------------------------------------------------- From The World [US loosens export restrictions to help India's 'full-blown' coronavirus crisis](
[Employees operate a filling machine inside a laboratory at the Serum Institute of India in Pune, India, Jan. 21, 2021.](
Credit: Rafiq Maqbool/AP The Defense Production Act has historically allowed the US to prioritize American needs in times of crisis. In an abrupt shift, the Biden administration will allow shipments of raw materials for the manufacture of COVID-19 vaccines to India, explains Matt Kavanagh, an assistant professor of global health at Georgetown University. "India is in a full-blown crisis right now, and we're seeing that not just India, but also Nepal, and various other countries in the region, are seeing such remarkable spiking cases of coronavirus that we just have to act," [Kavanagh said](. "And so, they're beginning to allow a certain set of materials to be shared with Indian manufacturers so that they can make vaccines to serve the Indian market and to serve the region." [Turkeyâs ErdoÄan calls Bidenâs acknowledgment of the Armenian genocide âunfounded, unjust, unrealisticâ](
[Supporters of the Turkey Youth Union chant slogans during a protest against US President Joe Biden's statement, outside the US consulate in Istanbul, April 26, 2021.](
Credit: Emrah Gurel/AP Armenia and human rights advocates around the globe applauded US President Joe Bidenâs move on Saturday [to recognize the World War I-era killings]( of as many as 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire â the precursor of modern Turkey â as a genocide. In a wide-ranging speech Monday evening, Turkish President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan described Bidenâs formal acknowledgment of the Armenian genocide as âunfounded, unfair and unrealistic.â --------------------------------------------------------------- Global Hit ð¥ The team behind the film âSound of Metalâ â this year's Oscar winner for Best Sound â worked across international borders. Sound supervisor Nicolas Becker, who is based in France, worked with sound engineers and editors from Venezuela and Mexico and studies in the Mexico City area. [They examined how we listen with our whole bodies](, and how we hear our bodies, our breathing, even our organs (ð§). [A screen grab of a tweet from The Hollywood Reporter](
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