Nayrouz News Agency : Jordan began, on Thursday, immunizing refugees registered with the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), as part of a
national COVID-19 vaccination plan, which started earlier this week.
In
a statement, the Ministry of Health said that anyone living on
Jordanian soil, including refugees and asylum seekers, is entitled to
receive the vaccine free of charge, noting that over 200,000 people are
registered on the national platform for the COVID-19 vaccine.
Over
the coming months, Jordan aims to vaccinate 20 percent of its
population against the virus and has currently procured three million
doses of the vaccine to enable this to happen.
Raia AlKabasi, an
Iraqi refugee living in Irbid, will be among the first refugees to
receive the vaccine. "We just want life to be back to normal. The
vaccine is the right way of doing this," she said.
Vaccinations
of refugees from Zaatari Camp also started on Thursday, with 43 refugees
from the camp travelling to the Department of Chest Infection, health
clinic in Mafraq to receive it. Jordan’s Ministry of Health is
administering the vaccinations.
From the beginning of the
COVID-19 pandemic, refugees have been generously included by the
Government of Jordan within the national response plan, able to access
health care and medical treatment as any Jordanian citizens can.
The
inclusion of refugees within the national vaccination campaign,
therefore, builds on this premise as well as the years of experience in
hosting refugees, ensuring their health and wellbeing after fleeing
conflict.
"Jordan has included refugees in its national response
plan since the beginning of the COVID 19 pandemic," said Dominik
Bartsch, UNHCR’s Representative to Jordan. "Reducing the spread of
COVID-19 now necessitates that the most vulnerable people in our society
and around the world can access vaccines, no matter where they come
from. It is with great pride that UNHCR is contributing to the efforts
of the Government of Jordan to achieve this," he added.
Refugees
living in urban areas – who represent 80 percent of the refugee
population in Jordan - will be able to receive the vaccine at their
local health clinic. For those living in the two main refugee camps,
UNHCR is working closely with the Ministry of Health to administer the
vaccination.
Since the first case of COVID-19 was confirmed among
refugees in Jordan in September 2020, 1,992 refugees living in refugee
camps have tested positive for the virus. Despite this, there are
currently only 194 active cases representing an 88 percent recovery
rate. The proportion of refugees with COVID-19 has also remained low at
1.6 percent compared to 3 percent among the general Jordanian
population.
Close cooperation between UNHCR and the Jordanian
government of and the Ministry of Health as well as the strong adherence
of refugees to prevention measures, has been key limiting the spread of
the virus among these vulnerable populations.