Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ISRAEL starts covid vaccinatio­ns.

Nation of 9 million people aims to give 60,000 doses daily

- TIA GOLDENBERG

TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel on Sunday began its coronaviru­s inoculatio­n drive, aiming to vaccinate some 60,000 people a day in a bid to stamp out the illness that is once again surging among its population.

The country will first immunize health workers, followed by the elderly, highrisk Israelis and those over 60 years old. Israel says it has secured sufficient doses for much of the country’s 9 million people from both Pfizer and Moderna, whose vaccine U.S. authoritie­s approved this week for emergency use.

Israel’s 81-year-old President Reuven Rivlin was among those vaccinated Sunday. In a tweet, he called on Israelis to go get the shot.

With public opinion polls showing many Israelis are reluctant to take vaccines right away, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he would set a “personal example” and insisted on being the first Israeli vaccinated. He received the shot Saturday night.

Netanyahu expressed confidence in the vaccine before rolling up his sleeve and receiving the injection. He called it an “exciting moment” that would put Israel on the path to returning to its normal routines. The country’s health minister also received the vaccine Saturday.

Israel has an agreement with Pfizer to secure 8 million doses of the U.S. pharmaceut­ical company’s vaccine — enough to cover nearly half of Israel’s population since each person requires two doses. Israel reached a separate agreement with Moderna earlier this month to purchase 6 million doses of its vaccine — enough for another 3 million Israelis.

Israeli media reported that the inoculatio­n drive got off to a bumpy start, with the country’s HMOs flooded with phone calls for appointmen­ts to get vaccinated.

With daily infection numbers trending upward and currently notching just under 3,000 a day, Israeli leaders are again debating whether to impose a third national lockdown since the pandemic began. Many restrictio­ns remain in place from the country’s second lockdown in the fall, with most hotels still shuttered and restaurant­s open only for delivery and take out. Unemployme­nt remains in the double digits.

Israel has had mixed results in its fight against the virus. Netanyahu was lauded in the spring for sealing borders and locking down the country swiftly, a move that battered the economy but drove down infection rates.

Israel has reported more than 374,000 confirmed cases and more than 3,000 virus-related deaths since the start of the pandemic.

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