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Is Israel discriminating against Palestinians with vaccine?

The Observer is wrong: Israel has vaccinated more Palestinians than any other country on earth

January 4, 2021 14:05
GettyImages-1230420960 (1).jpg
An Arab Israeli woman leaves after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine at Clalit Health Services, in the northern Arab Israeli city of Umm al Fahm , on January 4, 2021. - Israel said Sunday two million people will have received a two-dose Covid-19 vaccination by the end of January, a pace Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu boasts is the world's fastest. Health Ministry Director General Hezi Levy said that because of the enthusiastic takeup, Israel would be easing the speed of vaccination to eke out stocks. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP) (Photo by JACK GUEZ/AFP via Getty Images)
4 min read

In recent weeks, I’ve been to Israel’s mass vaccination centres in Jerusalem. I’ve interviewed Israelis, Palestinian Arabs, citizens and foreign nationals about their experiences of getting immunised. My conclusion is clear. Israel is not ‘excluding’ Palestinians from the vaccination programme, or discriminating between its own Jewish and Arab citizens – whatever the Observer  may say. 

On January 3, the paper asserted that Palestinians were 'excluded from the Israeli Covid vaccine’, juxtaposing them with ‘settlers’, which it claimed received vaccinations. 

The article, and further assertions that Israel was denying vaccinations to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip or West Bank, was misleading. In fact, by the  definition used by the Observer's sister paper the Guardian, Israel is actually providing vaccinations to Palestinian residents of Jerusalem. 

To understand how Israel is conducting its mass vaccination campaign, and why there has been so much misreporting, it’s important to understand how Israel’s health system works and how the country has approached the Covid crisis.