Marin Independent Journal

Israel is ready to deploy vaccine

- By Joseph Krauss

RAMALLAH, WEST BANK » Israel will begin rolling out a major coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n campaign next week after the prime minister reached out personally to the head of a major drug company. Millions of Palestinia­ns living under Israeli control will have to wait much longer.

Worldwide, rich nations are snatching up scarce supplies of new vaccines as poor countries largely rely on a World Health Organizati­on program that has yet to get off the ground. There are few places where the competitio­n is playing out in closer proximity than in Israel and the territorie­s it has occupied for more than half a century.

Next year could bring a sharp divergence in the trajectory of the pandemic, which until now has blithely ignored the national boundaries and political enmities of the Middle East. Israelis could soon return to normal life and an economic revival, even as the virus continues to menace Palestinia­n towns and villages just a few miles (kilometers) away.

Israel reached an agreement with the Pfizer pharmaceut­ical company to supply 8 million doses of its newly approved vaccine — enough to cover nearly half of Israel’s population of 9 million, since each person requires two doses. That came after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally reached out multiple times to Pfizer Chief Executive Albert Bourla, boasting that at one point he was able to reach the CEO at 2 a.m.

Israel has mobile vaccinatio­n units with refrigerat­ors that can keep the Pfizer shots at the required minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 Fahrenheit). It plans to begin vaccinatio­ns as soon as next week, with a capacity of more than 60,000 shots a day. Israel reached a separate agreement with Moderna earlier this month to purchase 6 million doses of its vaccine — enough for another 3 million Israelis.

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