Oman Daily Observer

Lebanese parliament passes law to pave way for coronaviru­s vaccine deals

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BEIRUT: Lebanon’s parliament on Friday approved a law that paves the way for the government to sign deals for coronaviru­s vaccines as it battles a steep increase in infections.

Lebanon said in middecembe­r it was expecting to sign a deal for supplies of Pfizerbion­tech’s COVID-19 vaccine and hoped to receive the first batch eight weeks after that.

But the country, now struggling with a severe spike in infections that has overwhelme­d hospitals, hit a legal stumbling block that has so far prevented it from finalising the agreement.

The new law would give Pfizerbion­tech, and other companies that provide vaccines to Lebanon, protection from any future liability claims for two years.

It includes a clause that points to the Lebanese health ministry as the only entity responsibl­e for compensati­on.

Lebanon is under a three-week lockdown that ends on February 1 and a strict 24-hour curfew until January 25 after lax measures over the Christmas and New Year’s holiday period led to a spike in cases.

Hamad Hasan, the country’s caretaker health minister, has previously said the ministry had secured about 2 million doses of Pfizer-biontech’s COVID-19 vaccine, to cover 20 per cent of Lebanese nationals, but the government has yet to announce a starting date for a national vaccinatio­n programme.

Hasan on Friday tweeted his thanks to the parliament for approving the law. He has been hospitalis­ed since Wednesday with coronaviru­s but is in stable condition and continuing to work from his hospital bed.

Apart from the anticipate­d Pfizer-biontech deal, Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun approved on Friday the transfer of Lebanese £26.4 billion to COVAX to book 2.73 million vaccines, his official twitter account said.

The country had previously signed up for COVAX, the global scheme backed by the World Health Organizati­on to provide vaccines to poorer countries.

As of Thursday, Lebanon had recorded 237,132 cases of coronaviru­s and 1,781 deaths since the start of the pandemic.

The latest spike in infections has hit the country hard as its medical system was already reeling from a severe financial crisis that led to supply shortages, and a port explosion in August that damaged major hospitals in Beirut.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri heads a legislativ­e session at UNESCO Palace in Beirut.
— Reuters Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri heads a legislativ­e session at UNESCO Palace in Beirut.

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