Medicine Hat News

Canada says first COVID-19 vaccine for refugees in Jordan offers glimmer of hope

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Canada’s internatio­nal developmen­t minister says the world’s first inoculatio­n of a refugee against COVID-19 this week is an important milestone in ending the pandemic everywhere.

Karina Gould told The Canadian Press in a statement that it was encouragin­g to see the rollout of new vaccinatio­ns because “it brings an early glimmer of hope to the most vulnerable people right across the globe as we fight this terrible pandemic.”

A woman living in the northern Jordanian city of Irbid who had fled northern Iraq became the first United Nations registered refugee to receive the COVID-19 vaccine on Thursday.

Before the pandemic, Canada committed $2.1 billion in security, humanitari­an and developmen­t funds to help Jordan and neighbouri­ng Lebanon cope with the massive influx of refugees they face due to the crises in Syria and Iraq.

Since the pandemic began, Canada has committed more than $865 million to the ACTAcceler­ator, a global effort to ensure low- and middle-income countries have equitable access to medical treatments during the pandemic. It has also committed $220 million to its partner initiative, the COVAX

Facility, to help buy vaccine doses for low- and middleinco­me countries.

“While we’re fighting for the health of our own citizens, I am committed to ensure we’re not leaving the rest of the world behind,” said Gould, who was appointed Friday as the co-chair of the COVAX internatio­nal engagement group.

The appointmen­t will see Gould working with the Indonesian foreign minister, the Ethiopian health minister and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, which has emerged in the last two decades as the major distributo­r of vaccines to poor countries.

“Canada has invested $865 million into global health efforts against COVID-19 and continues to make equitable access to a vaccine and health solutions to the pandemic a reality for all, including refugees living in precarious conditions,” said Gould.

In an updated mandate letter released Friday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Gould to work with new Foreign Affairs Minister Marc Garneau and other cabinet colleagues to “reinforce internatio­nal efforts to ensure that people around the world have access to health interventi­ons to fight COVID-19, including vaccines, therapeuti­cs and strengthen­ed health systems.”

Rema Jamous Imseis, the Canadian representa­tive for the UN High Commission­er for Refugees, said if refugees aren’t vaccinated, they run the risk of infecting people in their host countries.

“If you want to defeat the pandemic, you have to include refugees in the vaccine rollout around the world,” she said.

“That’s sort of the bigger context and what we’re doing is calling on all government­s, Canada included, to ensure that refugees and other displaced population­s are included.”

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Karina Gould

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