In a normal year, Rio de Janeiro’s Sambadrome would be preparing for its great moment of the year: the world’s most famous Carnival parade. But a week before what should be the start of Carnival, the pandemic has replaced pageantry, with the great celebration put on hold until next year as Rio struggles to quash a rise in Covid-19 cases.

The Rio mayor’s office opened a drive-thru immunisation station at the Sambadrome, where a line of cars queued up on a broad avenue built for floats.

“This is usually a place of pleasure. Today it is too, because we are exercising an act of citizenship and we are opening the Sambadrome to vaccinate, ” said Paulo Roberto Machado, a 68-year-old nurse who teaches at the Veiga de Almeida University.

Healthcare workers wait for the arrival of elderly people to be vaccinated at a drive-thru vaccination centre at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, February 6 — AP
Healthcare workers wait for the arrival of elderly people to be vaccinated at a drive-thru vaccination centre at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, February 6 — AP

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