Gulf Today

Lebanon administer­s first jabs of COVID-19 vaccine

An intensive care unit physician and a well-known 93-year-old comedian become the first to receive Pfizer-biontech dose

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Lebanon administer­ed on Sunday its first jabs of COVID-19 vaccine, with an intensive care unit physician and a well-known 93-year-old comedian becoming the first to receive PfizerBion­tech doses.

Lebanon launched its inoculatio­n campaign a day ater receiving the first batch of the vaccine - 28,500 doses from Brussels, near where Pfizer has a manufactur­ing facility. More were expected to arrive in the coming weeks.

The rollout will be monitored by the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies to ensure safe handling and fair and equitable access for all Lebanese.

Lebanon’s political, economic and health crises have converged, deepening the country’s troubles and public anger and mistrust of the long-serving ruling class.

The government failed to offer social safety nets or structural reform to secure internatio­nal assistance.

Lebanon has had a caretaker government since last summer ater Prime Minister Hassan Diab resigned. He quit following a massive explosion in the capital’s port in August that killed more than 200 people and injured thousands, testing the struggling health care sector and plunging the country deeper into crisis.

Since the explosion, rival political groups have been unable to agree on a new government and reforms demanded by the internatio­nal community to offer assistance. Pandemic restrictio­ns only worsened the economic crisis.

Internatio­nal organisati­ons and allied countries have extended only humanitari­an assistance to deal with the port explosion and the worsening pandemic.

The World Bank offered a $34 million loan to help pay for Pfizer-biontech vaccines for Lebanon that will inoculate over 2 million people.

Nearly 3 million other vaccine doses are expected to be secured through the Un-backed COVAX programme. Both are free of charge.

The private sector has been negotiatin­g separately for more vaccines.

Lebanon is in the midst of a surge in coronaviru­s cases. It has registered about 337,000 cases with 3,961 deaths since its first confirmed case last February.

The country of over 6 million, including more than 1 million refugees, at first managed to contain the virus.

But since the August explosion, it has witnessed a surge that only worsened during the holiday season.

That’s when the government, seeking to boost the economy, eased restrictio­ns in place for months as nearly 80,000 expats arrived in Lebanon.

Ater record deaths and infections, Lebanon imposed its strictest lockdown yet in early January, with 24-hour curfews and only basic services operating. The lockdown is now slowly easing.

But reflecting a sceptical public, only 450,000 people have registered to be vaccinated, according to the Health Minister Hamad Hassan.

The head of the ICU at the country’s lead hospital in fighting the virus, Dr Mahmoud Hassoun, was the first to receive the vaccine. Ater his inoculatio­n, Hassoun urged Lebanese to sign up to get the vaccine to ensure community immunity.

“Please take the vaccine, no mater which one, as soon as possible,” he appealed to the public through LBC TV.

Salah Tizani, a famous actor in Lebanon who goes by the name Abu Salim, was the first among the public of 75-year-old and above to get vaccinated.

Diab paid tribute to the country’s overworked and overwhelme­d front line workers.

“You are the unknown soldiers who have borne a great burden for a year, and who have been up to the responsibi­lity,” he told the medical team at the Rafik Hariri University Hospital.

Some 55,000 high-risk health workers are expected to receive the early doses.

Outside the American University of Beirut Hospital, doctors and nurses lined up to receive the vaccine. The private hospital said it aimed to vaccinated 180 people on Sunday.

Dr Rasha Sawaya, a pediatric emergency doctor, was among the first to get the jab.

“I feel privileged, excited that this is happening to Lebanon. A good thing for once is working,” she said.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Hamad Hassan vaccinates a member of the medical staff at the Rafik Hariri Hospital in Beirut, on Sunday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Hamad Hassan vaccinates a member of the medical staff at the Rafik Hariri Hospital in Beirut, on Sunday.

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