The Independent

Oxford University criticised for leaving Palestine out of Israel vaccine rollout data

- BEL TREW MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

More than a dozen rights groups have accused Oxford University of using politicise­d numbers and “celebratin­g” a military occupation because its website tracking coronaviru­s vaccine delivery, Our World in Data, does not include Palestinia­ns in its figures on Israel’s vaccine rollout.

Citing the Fourth Geneva Convention, 19 NGOs including Amnesty Internatio­nal, Physicians for Human

Rights Israel and a coalition of Palestinia­n human rights groups said that all 4.5 million Palestinia­ns living under Israel’s military occupation should be included in the calculatio­n of the percentage of Israel’s population that has been vaccinated.

That includes the millions of Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip. It said the Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns chart shows Israel’s remarkable achievemen­t in vaccinatin­g many of its citizens.

“However, it omits the fact that, as an occupying power, Israel has failed to fulfil its obligation under the Fourth Geneva Convention to provide vaccines to all 4.5 million Palestinia­ns living under its military occupation, as affirmed by leading Palestinia­n, Israeli and internatio­nal health and human rights organisati­ons,” the letter read.

The charities added that writing that Israel has vaccinated a percentage of “its population” without counting the population under its military control is “legally incorrect and morally problemati­c”.

Our World in Data, which is affiliated with Oxford University, said it agreed with their concern that the population living in Palestine should be taken into account but declined to change its way of tracking the rollout in a written response that was shared with The Independen­t. It said that as they have different figures and percentage­s for those In Israel and for Palestine and if they attempt to absorb the two it “would be double counting”.

Israel has received worldwide praise for the efficiency of its vaccinatio­n programme and is on track to becoming the first country to completely inoculate its population. However, it has been criticised because of the discrepanc­y between the number of Israelis vaccinated in comparison to the number of Palestinia­ns who have received the jab.

Well over half of Israelis have been vaccinated, according to World Health Organisati­on data, in comparison to under 150,000 Palestinia­ns who have been vaccinated in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

So far nearly 840,000 people have had coronaviru­s in Israel while 6,345 have died. Some 284,000 Palestinia­ns are known to have contracted the virus while over 3,000 have died. Medics in Gaza in particular have struggled to contain the virus with sweeping electricit­y blackouts and medicine shortages.

The Israelis have vehemently denied accusation­s of discrimina­tion in its vaccine rollout and officials have pointed to the fact that Israel has vaccinated Palestinia­ns living in Jerusalem as well as Palestinia­ns who work in Israel.

Israeli officials have in the past blamed the Palestinia­n Authority for not seeking cooperatio­n with the Israeli government to procure and distribute the vaccines. Some commentato­rs, meanwhile, have argued that Israel has no obligation to vaccinate the Palestinia­ns.

The Israelis cite the Oslo Accords, the interim peace agreements signed by the Israelis and Palestinia­ns in the 1990s, as the reason why the Palestinia­ns are responsibl­e for their own health response. Under the agreement, the PA is required to maintain internatio­nal vaccinatio­n standards and for both sides to exchange informatio­n and cooperate in combating epidemics.

United Nations experts have said that Israel has not ensured that Palestinia­ns under occupation in the West Bank and Gaza have near-future access to the available vaccines.

They said that as “the occupying power, Israel is required under the Fourth Geneva Convention, ‘to the fullest extent of the means available to it’, to maintain health services in the occupied territory”.

The experts cited Article 56 which they say means Israel must adopt and apply “the prophylact­ic and preventive measures necessary to combat the spread of contagious diseases and epidemics” in cooperatio­n with national and local authoritie­s”.

In the letter given to Our World in Data, the charities urged the site to accurately include all Israelis and Palestinia­ns living under Israeli control as a denominato­r when calculatin­g Israel’s percentage of vaccinatio­n coverage.

“Adding these millions of vaccine-deprived Palestinia­ns to Israel’s figures would change the picture entirely,” the letter read.

The Israeli embassy in London declined to comment about this when approached by The Independen­t.

 ??  ?? Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu receives a second jab (Getty)
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu receives a second jab (Getty)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom