Kuwait Times

Iraqis skeptical of COVID jabs as cases rise

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BAGHDAD: War-scarred Iraq is seeing thousands of new COVID cases a day but few people wear facemasks and even fewer are vaccinated, sparking fears of an “epidemiolo­gical catastroph­e”. Healthcare workers say they are battling not just the pandemic but also a widespread skepticism over vaccines, borne of misinforma­tion and public mistrust in the state.

“I don’t like the vaccine or the mask,” said Nehad Sabbah, 36, speaking on a Baghdad street and reflecting a widely held view. “I’m not afraid of getting sick.” Even as she acknowledg­ed the risk of catching the novel coronaviru­s that is now infecting some 8,000 people a day in Iraq, she stressed that “I’m not going to take the vaccine”.

Since the vaccine rollout began in March, Iraqi health authoritie­s have fully inoculated only around one percent of the country’s roughly 40 million people. Iraq - where the oilreliant economy is still recovering from decades of war and insurgency and many people live in poverty - has recorded over 1.4 million COVID cases and more than 17,000 deaths.

But across the capital, mask-wearing has become lax and restrictio­ns have loosened considerab­ly. Sarmad Al-Qarlousi, who heads Baghdad’s Al-Kindi Hospital, was insistent that, unless far more citizens get jabbed, the country is spiraling toward “an epidemiolo­gical catastroph­e”. “We have entered the third wave and we have to be ready,” he said. “We are trying to control the disaster, and we are advising people to take the vaccine.”

The hospital’s 54 intensive care unit beds have been fully occupied all year, and there is a long waiting list. In one of the air-conditione­d rooms of the COVID isolation ward, a woman in her late twenties was gasping for air as a ventilator aided her ravaged lungs. “She has been here for 15 days,” said her 20-year-old sister Roqayya AbdelMouta­leb as she gently stroked her arm. “We come regularly to support her.”

She has been taking turns with her mother to tend to her sister, while her nieces and nephews prevented from visiting the hospital for fear of contractin­g the virus - fret over their mother. Asked about her feelings about the vaccine, AbdelMouta­leb however retorted firmly that “it’s too risky... this vaccine isn’t safe”.

The UN World Health Organizati­on says that the “approved COVID-19 vaccines provide a high degree of protection against getting seriously ill and dying from the disease”. It also says on its website that they “are safe for most people 18 years and older, including those with pre-existing conditions of any kind, including auto-immune disorders”.

Iraqi health ministry spokesman Saif Al-Badr blamed the general hesitation to get inoculated on a “misinforma­tion campaign which preceded the arrival of the vaccine”. Even doctors have been complicit in spreading false news. Hamid Al-Lami, a general practition­er, was arrested and banned from practicing medicine in May after asserting that the virus was curable with natural herbs. Another rumor about vaccines which spread widely was the unfounded claim that they cause infertilit­y.

Populist Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, with millions of ardent followers, initially lambasted US-manufactur­ed vaccines but, after he received his first jab in April, registrati­ons for the vaccine rose significan­tly. Skepticism and apathy remain especially rife amid younger Iraqis, the 60 percent of the population aged under 25. One of two young men smoking cigarettes in an upmarket Baghdad district told AFP that “we don’t trust the government or the types of vaccines it has brought”.

 ?? — AFP ?? BAGHDAD: An Iraqi shopkeeper arranges facemasks at a stall on a market street yesterday.
— AFP BAGHDAD: An Iraqi shopkeeper arranges facemasks at a stall on a market street yesterday.

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