Vaccine nationalism? Why Jordan includes refugees in rollout. - CSMonitor.com
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Middle EastVaccine nationalism? Why Jordan includes refugees in rollout. |Taylor LuckSyrian farmer Mohsen Ibrahim jokes with nurses at the COVID-19 vaccination unit at the Zaatari refugee
camp in northern Jordan, where he shares two caravans between his seven children and five grandchildren, Feb. 15, 2021. Loading...
By Taylor LuckSpecial correspondent@taylor_luck Updated Feb. 24, 2021, 4:32 p.m. ET|Zaatari, Jordan
Even after he received the text notification, Mohsen Ibrahim could not believe he would get a COVID-19 vaccine.
“I expect a country to vaccinate its own citizens first. It’s their right,” says Mr. Ibrahim, a 65-year-old Syrian farmer, while waiting for his shot at a health clinic in the Zaatari
refugee camp in northern Jordan.
A wide smile creases his face from beneath the mask.
Why We Wrote This Amid COVID-19 vaccine rollouts, nations grapple with a central question: Who should be given priority? Jordan is taking the approach that until all of the most vulnerable
are protected from the virus, no one is.
“But I am so glad Jordan sees it differently.”
At a time when countries wrangle over vaccine orders, deliveries, and distribution within their own borders, the resource-poor kingdom of Jordan is taking a different tack – vaccinating the
most vulnerable, no matter their country of origin.
Seeing the common good as dependent on the good of everyone, Jordan is emerging as the antithesis – and perhaps an antidote – to so-called vaccine nationalism.
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For months, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, head of the World Health Organization, has urged national leaders to embrace a collective response to the pandemic at the global level, saying an
equitable distribution of limited vaccine resources was in each country’s national interest. He warned a month ago that the world was on the brink of “catastrophic moral failure” by not
sharing vaccines more fairly.
Jordanian officials say their refugee outreach is part of Jordan’s wider strategy to seek out and inoculate the most vulnerable across the country – to support the entire population.
The country is a long way off from securing enough doses to vaccinate the majority of its 10.5 million population. Yet refugees are among the first to be vaccinated.
Zaatari’s ruggedconditions
The first confirmed refugee in the world to receive the COVID-19 vaccination was a Zaatari resident last month.
“We are very grateful for the Jordanian government for targeting refugees, particularly inside the camps, where population density is high and social distancing is difficult,” says UNHCR
Jordan spokesperson Mohamed Al-Taher.
RecommendedWhat’s behind Trump’s assault on Harvard and crown-jewel US universities?Here in the Zaatari refugee camp, population 80,000, life is basic: residents hail donkey-led carriages as taxis, dust storms are a near-daily occurrence, and eight years after being driven
out of Syria by war, the vast majority still live in prefabricated trailer homes.
Yet it is precisely these rugged conditions that led officials to make Zaatari home to the first COVID-19 vaccination unit in a refugee camp in the world.
The Jordanian government and The U.N. Refugee Agency (UNHCR) opened the vaccination unit in this camp this week after nearly a month of transporting elderly and vulnerable residents to the
nearby town of Mafraq for inoculation. It cuts down the transport time from a one-hour round trip to a few minutes.
Like the dozens of vaccination units opening up across the country, a team of Health Ministry nurses and a physician receive patients, browse their medical history, and ask them a series of
questions before they administer the shot.
A handful of freshly inoculated Syrians sit in a socially distanced waiting room, sipping water as nurses monitor them before finally placing them on a bus to drop them off at their
home.
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The 70-year-old, who has health challenges, says she had spent a “year in fear” riding out the pandemic in Zaatari. Only after both she and her 72-year-old husband received their second
doses this week, she says, did the “fog” begin to lift.
Taylor LuckU.N. and medical staff stand outside the COVID-19 vaccination unit at the edge of the Zaatari Syrian refugee camp innorthern Jordan, Feb. 15, 2021. Limited resources
As of last week, 120 camp residents had received both doses of the vaccine, a further 80 received their first dose, as part of the initial batch of 2,000 Zaatari residents categorized by
Jordan’s Health Ministry as first-tier recipients.
The unit will receive 50 camp residents a day. Dozens of other refugees are being inoculated daily in regular vaccination units in towns and villages across the country, where the vast
majority of refugees live.
Although the numbers seem modest, Jordan’s limitations make them remarkable.
Resource-poor and mired in an economic crisis that predates the pandemic, Jordan has yet to receive full shipment of the 3 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine it purchased – enough to
vaccinate 15% of its population.
And vaccinating its refugee population is no small task; Jordan is home to 660,000 registered Syrian refugees and an estimated 1 million Syrians in total. It also hosts 70,000 Iraqis, and
tens of thousands of Yemenis, Sudanese, and Somalis, among others.
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Warning of a “lost generation,” U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi has urged the international community to follow Jordan’s suit and include refugees in their vaccination
plans. Lebanon has vowed that it, too, will be vaccinating refugees.
Noting Jordan is “proving how it should be done if we are to keep everyone safe,” Mr. Grandi says richer nations must help refugee host countries gain greater access to vaccines to ensure
their pandemic recovery.
A dose of dignityDespite near-universal mask-wearing, refugee camps like Zaatari are risky because they are crowded. Prefabricated “caravan” trailers measuring 20 feet by 6 feet often house several people
from multiple generations in what amounts to a single room.
Self-isolation was a dilemma for Khudewy al-Nabulsi, an artist who shares a caravan with his wife, seven children, and two grandchildren.
Refusing to go out and mix with other camp residents, he spent much of the last year in his trailer, producing paintings and designer greeting cards for customers
remotely.
RecommendedResilienceIn Kherson, Russian drone campaign turns civilians into targetsWhen he didn’t feel his best, Mr. Nabulsi would isolate himself in a corner of the family’s trailer, separated by a curtain, for days at a time.
“I have been waiting so long for this day,” he says, waiting for his turn for his first vaccine dose. “I am not just happy, I am extremely excited – a more normal life is around the corner.”
He described feeling emotional at being among the first in the country to be inoculated.
“Being told as a refugee that your life is worth just as much as a citizen is the highest form of dignity,” Mr. Nabulsi says as his name is called.
“A little mercy”Mr. Ibrahim, the former farmer, shares two caravans among his seven children and five grandchildren. Just last week, a close friend, a Syrian schoolteacher, died suddenly of COVID-19
complications.
As nurses start to roll up his right sleeve, Mr. Ibrahim is jovial, joking with the nurses, but then turns philosophical afterward.
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“After war and being displaced, we do not think about diseases often,” he says. “We just move on.”
Meanwhile, resentment from Jordanians is hard to find, if you find it at all.
Laith Aamer, a lawyer, is still waiting anxiously for his 70-year-old mother to have her turn to receive the vaccination. He and his family recovered from COVID-19 three weeks ago. But he
says he harbors no ill will toward Syrians who got the vaccine before his family.
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“When we say may God protect everyone from this virus, we mean everyone,” he says.
“People try to discriminate by nationality, ethnicity, class, or religion, but this pandemic proves that all our fates are tied together, from the very poorest to the very richest. ... We
should all offer each other a little mercy.”
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