Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Refugees shifted from vaccine priority list amid shortages

Refugees across the globe are suffering amid a lack of essential COVID-19 vaccines, as the World Health Organizati­on urges nations to prioritize immunizing asylum-seekers, placing them in the second priority group for at-risk people

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SALIMULLAH, a Rohingya refugee, has been living in the Indian capital of New Delhi since he fled violence in Myanmar in 2013.

Stateless – and now homeless after a fire razed his camp – the 35-year-old lives in a tent with as many as 10 other people at a time. Before the pandemic, he ran a small business selling groceries from a shack. But that was closed during India’s harsh, monthslong lockdown, and his savings are gone. He and his family have been surviving on donated food, but he has to return to work soon, despite the risk of getting COVID-19 and infecting others.

Although some refugees in India have begun getting vaccines, no one in his camp has received shots. Just over 7% of India’s population is fully vaccinated and vaccine shortages have plagued the nation of almost 1.4 billion.

“The disease doesn’t discrimina­te. If we get infected, locals will also,” Salimullah said. It wasn’t supposed to be like this. For months the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) urged countries to prioritize immunizing refugees, placing them in the second priority group for at-risk people, alongside those with serious health conditions. That is because refugees inevitably live in crowded conditions where the virus can spread more easily, with little access to the most basic health care or even clean water, said Sajjad Malik director of the U.N. refugee agency’s division of resilience and solutions. “They are really living in difficult situations,” he said.

Over 160 countries included refugees in their plans, but these have been upended by supply shortages. According to the WHO, some 85% of vaccines have been administer­ed by rich countries. In contrast, 85% of the world’s 26 million refugees live in developing countries struggling to vaccinate even the most vulnerable, according to the U.N. refugee agency. Some countries, like Bangladesh, pinned their hopes on COVAX, the global initiative aimed at vaccine equity. In February, it altered its original vaccinatio­n plan to include nearly one million Rohingya refugees in crowded camps on the country’s border with Myanmar. But so far, it has received only 100,620 doses – less than 1% of its allocated shots – from COVAX, leaving Rohingya refugees without. COVAX has not only faltered in Bangladesh.

Globally the initiative has delivered less than 8% of the 2 billion vaccine doses it had promised by the end of this year. Even in countries where refugee vaccinatio­n has started, supplies remain an issue.

In Uganda’s Bidi Bidi camp, less than 2% of 200,000 refugees have received a single shot of the AstraZenec­a vaccine, with second doses in short supply after India stopped exporting them after its own cases exploded. Other obstacles ranging from language barriers to misinforma­tion about vaccines are exacerbati­ng the problem. Thomas Maliamungu, a South Sudanese refugee and teacher in Bidi Bidi, said he overcame his fears to get his first shot only after it was made mandatory for teachers.

“Based on the rumors on the ground, I never wanted it,” he said. Some countries, like India, initially required documents like passports or other government identifica­tion, which many refugees lack, to register for vaccines.

Online registrati­on was also a barrier for many without internet access. India started vaccinatin­g people in January. Four months later documentat­ion requiremen­ts were eased. The Chin community in New Delhi, a Christian minority who fled the violence in Myanmar,

started getting shots in June. By then, India’s monstrous surge had already ripped through their crowded settlement, with entire families falling sick and dying. With the city’s health system collapsing, refugees struggled to get a hospital bed and private hospitals were charging around $4,000 for a few days, said James Fanai, president of the Chin Refugee Committee in Delhi. “Getting oxygen was almost impossible,” he said.

Registrati­on initiative­s, like volunteers going to camps to help refugees sign up for vaccines, have sometimes fallen flat, said Miriam Alía Prieto, the vaccinatio­n and outbreak response adviser for Doctors Without Borders.

“Many aren’t in camps but living with relatives,” she said, noting refugee population­s in Jordan and Lebanon. Due to the transient nature of some refugee population­s, some countries in Europe are gravitatin­g towards using the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine for refugees.

Prieto said that Spain is waiting for these vaccines to arrive. Greece began a drive for those living in migrant camps and shelters in early June using Johnson & Johnson shots. Refugees are getting shots in EU countries, but the situation is worse in other parts of the continent, said Frido Herinckx, COVID-19 Operations Manager at the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent’s Regional

Office for Europe.

For example, only some 1.5% of people in Armenia and 4.2% in Ukraine are fully vaccinated. In some countries, like Montenegro, the fear of arrest or deportatio­n remains an obstacle and, he said, Red Cross volunteers are accompanyi­ng migrants, including refugees, to help them get shots while ensuring they were not arrested afterwards.

“So (it’s) keeping that firewall between ... the border guards and the health service,” he said. But even if vaccine supply increases there’s the issue of liability – the question of who is responsibl­e in rare cases of serious side effects from the vaccine.

Humanitari­an organizati­ons can apply to distribute vaccines under the humanitari­an buffer – a contingenc­y mechanism set up by COVAX as a last resort. But doing so also means accepting liability for any serious side effects. Prieto said Doctors Without Borders wants to try to get vaccines from the manufactur­ers but does not want to assume liability.

Many vaccine makers have refused to ink deals for vaccines or ship them without that stipulatio­n. Another obstacle, she said, is that sometimes a vaccine greenlit by WHO is not yet authorized by the host country, creating a mismatch between what vaccines are available and what can be used.

 ??  ?? A young Rohingya refugee girl walks past an elderly man sitting inside a tent at a refugee camp alongside the banks of the Yamuna River on the southeaste­rn border of New Delhi, India, July 1, 2021.
A young Rohingya refugee girl walks past an elderly man sitting inside a tent at a refugee camp alongside the banks of the Yamuna River on the southeaste­rn border of New Delhi, India, July 1, 2021.

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