• A Syrian refugee receives a Covid-19 vaccine at a medical centre in the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan in February. AFP
    A Syrian refugee receives a Covid-19 vaccine at a medical centre in the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan in February. AFP
  • Syrian refugees wait to receive their vaccine at Zaatari. AFP
    Syrian refugees wait to receive their vaccine at Zaatari. AFP
  • The UK is leading calls for a vaccination ceasefire to allow Covid-19 vaccines to reach people living in conflict zones. AFP
    The UK is leading calls for a vaccination ceasefire to allow Covid-19 vaccines to reach people living in conflict zones. AFP
  • About $2.4bn has been raised for the UN-backed Covax campaign to help developing countries that are unable to afford their own vaccine stockpiles. AFP
    About $2.4bn has been raised for the UN-backed Covax campaign to help developing countries that are unable to afford their own vaccine stockpiles. AFP
  • A medical worker prepares the coronavirus vaccine made by Sinopharm to administer to Syrian refugees in Jordan. AP Photo
    A medical worker prepares the coronavirus vaccine made by Sinopharm to administer to Syrian refugees in Jordan. AP Photo
  • Britain's Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab highlighted the 160 million people who could miss out on Covid-19 vaccination because of conflict in their countries. AP Photo
    Britain's Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab highlighted the 160 million people who could miss out on Covid-19 vaccination because of conflict in their countries. AP Photo
  • Syrian refugees ride their bicycles in the Zaatari camp, where a Covid-19 vaccination programme has begun. EPA
    Syrian refugees ride their bicycles in the Zaatari camp, where a Covid-19 vaccination programme has begun. EPA
  • 'Global vaccination coverage is essential to beating coronavirus,' UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said. EPA
    'Global vaccination coverage is essential to beating coronavirus,' UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said. EPA

Jordan: first refugees vaccinated at Zaatari camp


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People living in northern Jordan’s sprawling Zaatari became the first refugees inside a camp to receive a coronavirus vaccine, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said on Monday.

Jordanian authorities vaccinated 58 Syrians at the camp, one of the largest in the world.

The UNHCR said it was the first vaccination in the world at a UN-administered refugee camp.

“The Jordanian Health Ministry is overseeing the process at Zaatari,” a spokesman for the commissioner said.

He said the Syrians who received the vaccine on Monday had registered on an online platform set up by the Jordanian government and open to all residents of the country.

Authorities say registrations have been slow, with 200,000 people booking appointments so far.

Jordan started distributing Covid-19 vaccines last month with the aim of vaccinating a fifth of the country’s 10 million population.

On January 16, an Iraqi in the northern city of Irbid became the first refugee in Jordan to receive a vaccine.

About 10 per cent of Jordan's population are refugees. Among them are 662,000 Syrians registered with the UNHCR and 65,000 Iraqis.

Zaatari has 75,000 Syrian refugees. Another 37,000 live at Al Azraq camp in Jordan’s eastern desert.

The rest of the Syrian refugees are mostly in Irbid, Amman and other urban centres.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi said last month that Jordan had set an example of how tackling the coronavirus “should be done if we are to keep everyone safe”.

Jordanian government data shows 4,455 deaths from the pandemic and almost 350,000 infections, mostly registered since October last year.

The number of infections in the kingdom is thought to be much higher, with 20 per cent of Jordan’s population estimated to have caught the coronavirus.