Spain's chief of defence staff Miguel Angel Villarroya resigns for getting COVID-19 vaccine before allowed
The most senior member of Spain's armed forces, General Miguel Angel Villarroya, offered to resign on Saturday after he and other military officers jumped the queue to receive the vaccine against Covid-19 early. Defence Minister Margarita Robles accepted his resignation, according to the defence ministry.
- World
- AFP
- Published Date: 08:53 | 23 January 2021
- Modified Date: 08:57 | 23 January 2021
Spain's chief of the defence staff resigned on Saturday, the armed forces said, after a row over him getting the coronavirus vaccination despite not being on a priority list.
General Miguel Angel Villarroya's resignation came as a scandal brews over Spanish military and political officials getting early vaccinations supposedly reserved for health workers and people in retirement homes.
"In order to preserve the image of the armed forces, General Villarroya today presented his resignation request to the defence minister," the armed forces said in a statement.
The 63-year-old general was quoted as saying he had "never intended to take advantage of unjustifiable privileges".
His resignation was accepted by Defence Minister Margarita Robles, a source told AFP.
His departure came just a day after the interior ministry sacked a lieutenant-colonel who served as a staff liaison to the civil guard, because an internal report found he had received the shot without being a priority.
The report accuses several other defence staff members of improperly receiving the vaccine, and Robles has warned more resignations could follow.
Politicians have also resigned over receiving the vaccine out of turn, including Manuel Villegas, health advisor for the southeast Murcia region.
But Javier Guerreron, health advisor to the Spanish north African enclave of Ceuta, refused to resign, saying he had not violated any protocol.
"I didn't want to be vaccinated," he said, adding that he "doesn't like vaccines".
Spain has been hard-hit by the pandemic, having recorded 55,441 deaths from nearly 2.5 million cases so far.
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