The Jerusalem Post

Palestinia­ns renege on deal with Israel to receive 1.4 m. COVID vaccines

Retraction announceme­nt came amid public criticism, after Israel delivered 100,000 doses of Pfizer vaccine to the Palestinia­n Authority

- • By LAHAV HARKOV and KHALED ABU TOAMEH

The Palestinia­n Authority has rejected the transfer of more than a million COVID-19 vaccine doses from Israel after its health authoritie­s determined that they “fall short of meeting the technical criteria,” PA Health Minister Mai al-Kaila said in a press conference late Friday, following Palestinia­n public criticism.

The announceme­nt came after Israel delivered a first shipment of 100,000 Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine doses to the PA, within hours of the Israeli government’s announceme­nt of the vaccine exchange agreement.

Israel said it would supply up to 1.4 million doses of the vaccine immediatel­y to the PA, and in September or October, when the doses purchased from Pfizer by the PA are due to arrive, the same number of doses would be returned to Israel.

The exchange deal would allow a large number of Palestinia­ns to be vaccinated months earlier than planned.

Palestinia­ns call for probe into ‘vaccine scandal,’

However, after some of the vaccines had already been transferre­d to Palestinia­n possession, Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh announced late Friday that he was canceling the shipment because they are expiring soon.

Israel, however, said it had given the Palestinia­ns that informatio­n.

The PA’s reversal was taken after many Palestinia­ns criticized the PA government over the deal with Israel, largely because the doses were about to expire. They called on the government to cancel the agreement.

Al-Kaila said that the PA government had notified Israel that the vaccines must conform to all specificat­ions and conditions of validity and safety.

“After medical and technical teams received and inspected the first batch, it was found that the doses did not conform to the technical specificat­ions as previously agreed upon, and that their expiry date was close,” she said.

The Israeli Health Ministry said on Saturday night that “the COVID-19 vaccines we gave the Palestinia­n Authority were perfectly valid. The expiration

dates were known to the PA and everything was agreed upon in advance. The Palestinia­ns received the same vaccines that are currently given to Israelis.”

The PA government purchased four million vaccines from Pfizer and is hoping to receive them as soon as possible, she said, noting that it would continue to exert pressure on the company

to provide the Palestinia­ns with the vaccines they had purchased as soon as possible.

Already on Thursday, before any formal announceme­nt was made, the PA reportedly held issue with two conditions surroundin­g the transfer of the vaccines, one of which was that the agreement would not be signed under the “State of Palestine” and the second was that the vaccines would not be transferre­d to the Gaza Strip.

“Yesterday, we informed the Israelis that we were giving up all vaccines because they had agreed not to supply some of them to Gaza,” the Palestinia­n Health minister said Friday. “Today, they came back to us and agreed.”

As morbidity in Israel has plummeted due to the vaccinatio­n campaign over the past few months, many health experts warned that the vulnerabil­ity of the Palestinia­n population to the virus represents a risk for Israel and that the country should consider inoculatio­n of Palestinia­ns to be a priority.

Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz spoke with al-Kaila on Friday, and said the agreement will lower the COVID19 numbers in the Palestinia­n Authority without reducing Israel’s stores of vaccines.

“Coronaviru­s does not recognize borders or differenti­ate between nations,” Horowitz said. “This important move is in the interest of all sides. I hope and believe this move will promote cooperatio­n between Israel and its Palestinia­n neighbors in other areas, as well.”

COGAT commander Maj.Gen. Rassan Alian said that “over the last few weeks, we have been working very hard to bring about the signing of the vaccinatio­n agreement between the State of Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority, which entails a significan­t joint effort to eradicate COVID-19 in our region.

“This is of paramount health and economic interest, as we live in one epidemiolo­gical space,” Alian explained. “This agreement is another in a series of measures advanced and implemente­d… with the aim of maintainin­g the health of the area’s residents and restoring the routine of life.”

Earlier this year, activists, NGOs and media outlets accused Israel of withholdin­g vaccines from Palestinia­ns and violating internatio­nal law by not vaccinatin­g them.

However, the Palestinia­n Authority had not asked Israel for help with the vaccines, while Israel had actually offered assistance and vaccinated 100,000 Palestinia­ns with Israeli work permits as Israel’s vaccine rollout reached its peak. Israel also vaccinated Palestinia­ns in east Jerusalem, who are registered under Israeli HMOs.

In addition, the Oslo Accords stipulate that the PA is responsibl­e for healthcare, including vaccinatio­ns, for Palestinia­ns in Judea and Samaria and Gaza.

They received about 10,000 doses of the Russian Sputnik V vaccine earlier this year, as well.

Physicians for Human Rights said that Friday’s announceme­nt was “too little and far too late.”

“Instead of taking responsibi­lity and providing vaccines without delay to the entire population and without unnecessar­y calculatio­ns, Israel is making deals with the lives and health of millions of people,” according to Ghada Majadli of Physicians for Human Rights.

“Israel has a moral and legal responsibi­lity, according to internatio­nal law, to ensure the health of the residents of the territorie­s under its control,” Majadli said. “The fact that Israel has only transferre­d a small number of vaccines is disgracefu­l and a shameful avoidance of responsibi­lity. Israel must immediatel­y provide vaccines to all residents of the West Bank and Gaza.”

 ?? (Raneen Sawafta/Reuters) ?? LATEST WHO data show that only 383,984 Palestinia­ns have been vaccinated in the West Bank, and 52,291 in Gaza have received at least one dose.
(Raneen Sawafta/Reuters) LATEST WHO data show that only 383,984 Palestinia­ns have been vaccinated in the West Bank, and 52,291 in Gaza have received at least one dose.

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