COVID-19 vaccines given to 205 of 62,000 people in Syria's Al-Hol refugee camp

Syrian official Issa al-Khalaf has rejected claims that foreign wives of suspected fighters have been excluded from receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.

Over 200 vaccinated in Syria's Al-Hol camp,

Hundreds have been vaccinated at the Al-Hol camp that houses about 62,000 people. Source: AAP

More than 200 people have been vaccinated against COVID-19 in northeast Syria's densely-populated Al-Hol camp for the displaced and families of defeated jihadists, a government official has said.

The vaccination drive, using AstraZeneca jabs under the Covax programme for low-income parts of the world, covers government-held areas and territory run by a Kurdish local administration.
Syrian health ministry teams had vaccinated 205 people up until Wednesday in Al-Hol camp of Hasakeh province, the ministry's provincial chief Issa al-Khalaf said.

The camp houses about 62,000 people, mainly women and children, including tens of thousands of family members of foreign Islamic State group fighters.

According to medical sources inside the camp, foreign wives of suspected fighters were being excluded from the vaccination drive, a charge denied by Mr Khalaf.
Syria's health ministry in April received a first consignment of 203,000 doses of AstraZeneca through Covax, according to the World Health Organisation.

Almost 7,000 people have so far been inoculated in the Kurdish-held areas, in a campaign launched a month ago, local health chief Jawan Moustafa said.

The areas of northeast Syria under Kurdish control, where medical shortages are rife, have recorded over 18,000 cases of coronavirus, including 761 deaths.


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Source: AFP, SBS


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