Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica banking on Biden for 1 million vaccines

- Lester Hinds/Gleaner Writer

JAMAICA COULD be the beneficiar­y of one million doses of COVID-19 vaccine if the Biden-Harris administra­tion accedes to an impassione­d request of prominent expatriate­s and others lobbying the White House on what they describe as “the most consequent­ial humanitari­an crisis” since Independen­ce.

The request to the Biden administra­tion preceded Monday’s announceme­nt that the United States would offload 60 million doses of vaccines to other nations. But that pressure intensifie­d with two rounds of negotiatio­ns on Tuesday as nations jostle for the ear of presidenti­al advisers.

Among those in the forefront of the lobby are the Rev Dr Karen Green, vicechair of the Democratic Party in Florida, who is Jamaican; Congressma­n Darren Soto of Florida’s 9th congressio­nal district who has been a long-time advocate for Caribbean American communitie­s; and Congresswo­man Stacy Plaskett of the US Virgin Islands.

Jamaica’s ambassador to Washington, Audrey Marks, and consul general in Miami, Oliver Mair, have also been involved in the talks.

Now-deceased Florida Congressma­n Alcee Hastings was part of the negotiatio­ns earlier.

The release of one million doses of Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine, pending federal safety review, could add fervour to Jamaica’s vaccinatio­n drive, as the country lags behind most Caribbean countries on per-capita inoculatio­n despite its crude volume of more than 135,000 shots.

At 4.6 doses per 100 people, Jamaica ranked 84th out of 157 countries and third from bottom among English-speaking Caribbean nations according to a midApril New York Times tracker.

The country has seen its positivity rate fall by half after several weekend lockdowns which depressed daily infections to double digits as at Tuesday.

Infections now stand at 45,212 while there have been 767 deaths. Hospitalis­ations have fallen by around 50 per cent to 220, with 30 patients critically ill and 12 moderate.

The terms of the prospectiv­e US vaccine offer are unclear.

The effort to secure vaccine supplies for Jamaica began on March 27 when Green sent a letter to President Joseph R. Biden pressing Washington to allow the northern Caribbean island to tap its arsenal of vaccines.

COVID CRISIS DIRE

Against the backdrop of a series of briefings held with various representa­tives, Green cast Jamaica’s COVID-19 crisis as dire.

“While the Caribbean region, at large, will certainly need assistance under the programme, there is broad consensus at this stage that Jamaica’s exigent healthcare emergency requires priority action,” Green said in her letter to the president.

“Where Jamaica was one of the few countries to benefit expeditiou­sly from case-management strategies in the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak, the explosive spread of the virus has ripped through the population,” the letter said.

The letter continued: “Mr President, Jamaica now finds itself facing the most consequent­ial humanitari­an crisis since our Independen­ce and as a proud Jamaica immigrant, I am personally grateful for your attention to this interventi­on.”

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