The National - News

Covid-19 is still a threat in Syria and Lebanon

▶ A recent study estimates that there are 85,000 suspected cases in Damascus alone

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Since Tuesday, the region’s attention has shifted away from the coronaviru­s pandemic to the devastatin­g blasts in Beirut, which killed more than 150 people and left hundreds of thousands homeless. Beirut’s most recent tragedy, however, will almost certainly lead to an increase in the already soaring number of Covid-19 cases in the country. Three days after the explosions, Lebanon has reported a record 279 infections.

Thousands of those injured rushed to Beirut’s hospitals after the blasts, with medical facilities already near full capacity due to a spike in the number of cases prior to the explosion. In the days since, Lebanese have come to Beirut to help clean up the capital and provide aid to those who need it most. This moving show of solidarity has, however, led to crowds gathering in some areas to provide relief, having to give up physical distancing precaution­s, even as hospitals have been damaged.

In neighbouri­ng Syria, meanwhile, coronaviru­s is believed to be widely spreading among the population. Roughly 1,000 cases have been declared in the country, but the real number is believed to be much higher. A recent study by Syria In Context, a weekly newsletter, estimates that there are about 85,000 suspected cases in Damascus. The virus is also believed to be widespread in Latakia, Aleppo, Deir Ezzor and Sweida. A lack of personal protective equipment and testing kits across Syria has made it difficult to assess the true scale of the outbreak. The regime has failed to take any meaningful action to protect its citizens. In a video recently shared by Hosein Mortada, a pro-government journalist, on the occasion of Army Day, he is seen at what he says is a Syrian Arab Army air base, with his mask pushed below his chin. Officers are seen in the background, with no face coverings and little respect for physical distancing measures.

Rebel-held Idlib is completely cut off from the rest of the country, with little access to testing kits. Its healthcare infrastruc­ture has been ravaged by years of shelling. Covid-19 is affecting a population battered by nearly a decade of conflict, and being exported to neighbouri­ng countries. Syria has porous borders with Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Turkey. Three weeks ago, Jordan announced that it had 46 new cases, with 44 of those infected having arrived from Syria.

The nation is left woefully unprepared to deal with the pandemic, and the regime has shown scant regard for the lives of the people it is supposed to protect. After having fallen victim to a terrible blast, Lebanon is also in need of help to stop the pandemic. The internatio­nal community must provide coronaviru­s aid to the nations that need it most, in addition to humanitari­an relief.

Since Thursday, the UAE has sent tens of millions of dirhams worth of aid to Lebanon, including 12 tonnes of protective equipment to safeguard against Covid19. Medical aid can save lives and help to halt the spread of the pandemic, but it must be delivered through trusted charities to prevent it from falling into the hands of corrupt government­s that have only wrought pain upon their people.

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