Journalist from Vienna to get vaccine in Serbia: "My mon translated from Cyrillic. I chose Belgrade"

"I chose Belgrade. The flight from Vienna to Belgrade takes about an hour. In one of the form fields, you can choose which vaccine you want," explained the Austrian portal's journalist Amra Duric

Foreign citizens wait to get vaccinated in Belgrade; Photo: Tanjug/Tara Radovanovic

There is a shortage of vaccines against coronavirus in Austria, the local media claim and stress that "what is scarce here is abundant in Serbia."

Namely, as Heute reports, instead of waiting for vaccination in Vienna, a journalist of that Austrian portal, Amra Duric, decided to apply for vaccination against coronavirus in Serbia, and she could even choose which vaccine she wanted.

"I applied for free through the site euprava.gov.rs. The registration form is filled out online, but it is only available in Cyrillic. My mother translated it for me, but if you don't have a mother who knows the Cyrillic script, you can use Google translator, it works. In addition to entering personal data such as name, last name, place of residence, e-mail address and passport number, they ask you if you have any allergies or some disease," Amra writes.

"I chose Belgrade. The flight from Vienna to Belgrade takes about an hour. In one of the form fields you can choose which vaccine you want. AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Sinopharm, Sputnik V and Moderna are all available. As the date, I chose 'the soonest possible". It took me a minute to fill out the form and I received an email confirmation that I was registered. I am now waiting for an appointment,"added the journalist, who, judging by her last name, most likely has origins in this region of Europe.

Austria's state broadcaster ORF recently had a special report about Serbia, presenting our country as a "vaccine paradise" that has been more successful than the EU in terms of vaccination.

Video: Vaccination of foreign citizens in Nis, southern Serbia

(Telegraf.rs)