19 June,2021 07:39 AM IST | Jerusalem | Agencies
New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern receives her first dose of the Pfizer vaccine on Friday at Auckland. Pic/AFP
Israel said Friday it will transfer around 1 million doses of soon-to-expire coronavirus vaccines to the Palestinian Authority in exchange for a similar number of doses the Palestinians expect to receive later this year.
Israel, which has reopened after vaccinating some 85% of its adult population, has faced criticism for not sharing its vaccines with the 4.5 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza. The agreement was announced by the new Israeli government that was sworn in on Sunday. It said it would transfer Pfizer vaccines that will expire soon, and that the PA would transfer a similar number of vaccines when it receives them from the pharmaceutical company In September or October.
Israel has carried out one of the most successful vaccination programmes in the world, allowing it to fully reopen businesses and schools. This week, authorities lifted the requirement to wear masks in public, one of the last remaining restrictions.
Rights groups have said that Israel, as an occupying power, is obliged to provide vaccines to the Palestinians. Israel denies having such an obligation, pointing to interim peace agreements reached with the Palestinians in the 1990s.
Those agreements say the PA, which has limited autonomy in parts of the occupied West Bank, is responsible for health care but that the two sides should cooperate to combat pandemics. Gaza is ruled by the Islamic militant group Hamas, which is considered a terrorist organization by Israel and Western countries. The PA has said it is acquiring its own supplies through agreements with private companies and a WHO programme designed to aid needy countries.
Covid-19 vaccines by Pfizer and Moderna do not harm male fertility, suggests a study which found the levels of sperm in participants remained at healthy levels after they got two doses of the mRNA preventive. "One of the reasons for vaccine hesitancy is the potential negative effect on fertility," the authors of the study published on Thursday in JAMA, from the University of Miami noted. There were no significant decreases in any sperm parameters before and after two doses of the vaccine, researchers found.
2,48,969
No. of new cases reported globally in the past 24 hours
17,69,45,596
Total no. of cases worldwide
38,36,828
Total no. of deaths worldwide
Source: WHO/Johns Hopkins
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