The Jewish Chronicle

Piers Morgan repeats claim that Israel ‘not giving’ jabs to Palestinia­ns

- BY LEE HARPIN POLITICAL EDITOR

THE PRESENTER of Good Morning Britain, Piers Morgan, has repeated the controvers­ial claim that Israel is “excluding” the Palestinia­ns from Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns.

Discussing the UK government’s roll-out plans for the vaccine with three guests on Wednesday’s episode of the ITV breakfast show, the former Daily Mirror editor said: “It is amazing what they are doing in Israel — but they are not giving any to the Palestinia­ns. “

Mr Morgan then added: “I imagine there a lot of people on the Gaza Strip that could do with the vaccinatio­n.”

Israel has been widely praised for the success of its own Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine roll-out, which has seen more than 1.5 million of its citizens receive a dose — a higher proportion of the population than anywhere else.

The vaccine has been distribute­d to all Israeli citizens with the government delivering appeals to religious Jewish and Arab Muslim communitie­s to increase their uptakes.

But reports, including one last weekend in The Observer newspaper, have controvers­ially criticised Israel for excluding Palestinia­ns living in the

West Bank and Gaza from receiving the vaccine.

The Palestinia­n Authority has previously confirmed that it has not approached Israel for the vaccine and instead has secured nearly four million Russian-made jabs.

A senior official from the PA’s Ministry of Health was quoted as saying the Palestinia­ns did not expect Israel to sell them vaccines, or purchase the drug from any other country on their behalf.

Hamas, the Islamic terror group that has run the Gaza Strip since 2006 after throwing the PA out, has also not asked Israel for vaccinatio­ns, and is unlikely to ever do so.

The shots are due to arrive in the West Bank next month.

Under article 17 of the Oslo Accords, the PA is responsibl­e for healthcare, including vaccines, for all Palestinia­ns living in the West Bank and Gaza.

Israel has also been vaccinatin­g Palestinia­ns in East Jerusalem.

Health Minister Yuli Edelstein had told the New York Times he had “no doubt” Israel would help the Palestinia­ns in an article published last week.

Meanwhile, Labour MP Dame Margaret Hodge revealed she had been targeted by people complainin­g about Israel’s

The PA is responsibl­e for the healthcare of Palestinia­ns

vaccine programme.

She tweeted on Wednesday: “Why would you write to me complainin­g about the vaccine programme in Israel and imply I am personally responsibl­e for its rollout...I am not an Israeli MP, an Israeli health worker or an Israeli government official. Beyond bizarre.”

Other political leaders have continued to spread the idea that Israel is excluding Palestinia­ns from the vaccine it has purchased.

In Ireland, the Green Party’s Patrick Costello said: “In the West Bank, the vaccinatio­n drive includes only those living in Israeli settlement­s, which are illegal under internatio­nal law, and not their Palestinia­n neighbours.

“Much like the building of the settlement­s themselves, the Israeli vaccine programme in occupied Palestine falls short of the standards required by internatio­nal law.”

 ?? PHOTO:ITV ??
PHOTO:ITV

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