The total number of cases exceeded 2 million today coronavirus in Poland, according to data from the Ministry of Health, while the country is facing the third wave of the pandemic.
THE Poland has recorded 2,010,244 cases of coronavirus and 48,807 deaths in total since the beginning of the pandemic, according to ministry figures. Authorities announced today 25,998 new cases of coronavirus.
At the same time, the Hungary says the first phase of easing restrictions to stem the new coronavirus epidemic could begin when another one million of its citizens have been vaccinated, as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said today.
“There is a high probability that we will have a free (from restrictions) summer,” he noted, speaking on the public radio station, adding that the country’s hospitals are managing to deal with a record wave of infections, as broadcast by AMPE.
The daily account of deaths associated with COVID-19, he added, reaching 213, a record number, with more than 10,000 people in hospitals.
Orban aims to vaccinate as many people as possible as soon as possible so that there can be a significant restart of the economy, which shrank by 5.1% last year.

About 1.5 million Hungarians have been vaccinated so far, and he said the restrictions could be eased once that number rises to 2.5 million, or about a quarter of the population.
Orban reiterated his support for the use by Hungary Chinese and Russian vaccines against COVID-19, which was the first EU Member State to approve and make available.

Orban wants a reconstitution of the European right
The Hungarian prime minister also said that the nationalists of his ruling party would work with parties with similar ideas in Italy and Poland to reorganize European right-wing politics. He added that he would soon meet with Matteo Salvini, who leads the League in Italy, and Polish Prime Minister Matteo Morawiecki, and “we will plan the future together.”
The ruling party Fidesz announced his departure from the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest center-right parliamentary group in the European Parliament.
Fidesz had distanced himself politically from the EPP in recent years on issues including the taxation and handling of the new coronavirus pandemic, the Hungarian prime minister also noted.
As elections are held in Hungary in 2022, Orban faces the biggest challenge of his ten years in power as he comes to the polls with a united opposition.
The Hungarian Prime Minister has turned to increasingly harsh rhetoric in recent years, advocating “national homogeneity”. imitating policies against LGBT people in Poland with legal changes and using harsh language against the Roma minority in Hungary.

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