Middle East

After Quick Vaccine Success, Israel Faces New Virus Woes


JERUSALEM — Just last week, Israel was seen as a model coronavirus country, outstripping the rest of the world in the pace of vaccinating its citizens by a hefty margin.

But the virus had other ideas.

This week, Israel faces a tightened lockdown as infections have spiraled to more than 8,000 new cases a day, officials fear the more transmissible variant of the virus first identified in Britain is spreading rapidly and Israel’s vaccine supplies are running low.

The prospect that Israel would have the virus under control by spring, once promising, now seems uncertain. Health officials say that in the short term, at least, the vaccine campaign cannot compete with the soaring infection rates.

And the Palestinian Authority, which runs its own health care system in the occupied West Bank, has asked Israel for vaccines, prompting a debate over Israel’s responsibility to the Palestinians at a time when Israel’s vaccine supplies are dwindling.

“We are at the height of a global pandemic that is spreading at record speed with the British mutation,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a video statement late Tuesday, justifying the government’s decision to impose a full national lockdown that will shutter most schools and all nonessential workplaces for at least two weeks.

“Every hour we delay, the quicker the virus is spreading, and it will exact a very heavy price,” he added.

The lockdown decision came after Prof. Eran Segal of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, presented the government with the dire projection that without such action, Israel’s infection rate could rise to 46,000 new cases per day by February, a staggering number in a country with a population of about 9 million.

Government officials cited the variant discovered in Britain as one of the main reasons for imposing the tighter restrictions. Mr. Netanyahu said the variant was “leaping forward,” though not at the same pace as it has spread in Britain.

At least 30 cases of the variant have been identified in Israel by special sampling, scattered across 14 different towns and cities, but officials and experts said those tests were aimed at identifying the presence of the variant, not quantifying it, and the actual number of cases was likely much higher.

Many scientists believe that the variant is more transmissible, meaning it may spread more easily from one person to another.

Professor Segal said the variant may be a factor in the soaring infection rate in Israel’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish community. In the past four weeks, infections among the ultra-Orthodox have increased sixteenfold.

He estimated that the variant now accounts for about 20 percent of the morbidity in ultra-Orthodox towns and neighborhoods.

There have been constant tensions between the ultra-Orthodox, who make up some 12.5 percent of the population, and mainstream Israelis during the coronavirus crisis, in particular over the insistence of some ultra-Orthodox rabbis on keeping their educational institutions open against the regulations during previous lockdowns and generally flouting the restrictions on large gatherings and social distancing.

Casting another shadow over the tantalizing prospect of an early emergence from the crisis, Israel’s vaccine supplies were running low and officials said that they may have to slow down their widely vaunted vaccination program by mid-January unless they can persuade the drug companies to deliver more vaccines sooner than they had promised.

Just days ago, Israelis were celebrating the successful rollout of their vaccination campaign, which has outpaced the rest of the world. About 1.5 million Israeli citizens, or more than 16 percent of the population, have received a first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine since the inoculation program started on Dec. 20.

The shortage, officials say, may be a result of the program’s success: the program’s first phase went faster than most thought possible.

Israel has not disclosed the number of vaccine doses that it has received, saying the agreements with the drug companies are confidential. The government has promised to reserve enough vaccines so that all those who received a first dose can receive their second dose as planned after about 21 days. That should include the majority of Israel’s high-risk population of health workers and citizens aged 60 and over.

Quiet negotiations are being held with the drug companies to move up their deliveries, but the shortage could cause delays in the rollout. Mr. Netanyahu, whose political future might depend on the success of the program, said he was “continuing to work around the clock to bring millions of vaccines to Israel.”

Mr. Netanyahu said Wednesday that a small first shipment of Moderna vaccines was to arrive Thursday and that more were forthcoming. Drug companies now see Israel as an interesting test case for the efficacy of the vaccinations and, potentially, as the first country to be fully vaccinated, officials and experts said, giving it an edge in securing additional shipments.

Israel has faced criticism from human rights groups for not extending its vaccine program to most Palestinians living under Israeli control even as Israelis living in West Bank settlements were being vaccinated.

Palestinian officials have recorded hundreds of Covid-19 cases a day in the occupied West Bank and in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip, the crowded Palestinian coastal enclave whose borders are tightly controlled by Israel and Egypt, and health officials believe the true numbers are much higher. Palestinians in those areas have yet to receive vaccines.

On Wednesday, two Palestinian officials said that the Palestinian Authority had asked Israel for up to 10,000 doses of the vaccine to immunize Palestinian frontline workers.

Hussein al-Sheikh, the top Palestinian official in charge of coordinating with the Israelis, said that Israel had refused.

An Israeli official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to speak to the news media, said that Israel had secretly supplied “dozens” of vaccines to the Palestinians this week but had not yet responded to the larger request. Several Palestinian officials denied that they had received any vaccines from Israel.

The Oslo Accords, the interim peace agreements signed in the 1990s between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, commit the two sides to cooperate in combating epidemics and to assist each other in times of emergency.

The Geneva Conventions also oblige an occupying power to ensure medical supplies for the local population and the preventive measures needed to combat contagious diseases and epidemics.

Alan Baker, a former Israeli ambassador and expert in international law who participated in the drafting of the Oslo Accords, said he believed that would “place an obligation on Israel to help with the provision” of vaccines to combat Covid 19, but that it was “a two-way street.”

Hamas, he said, is holding Israeli hostages in Gaza and is required by the same humanitarian standards to release them.

Israel’s health minister, Yuli Edelstein, said last week that it was in Israel’s interest to contain the virus on the Palestinian side but that Israel’s first obligation was toward its own citizens. (Palestinian citizens of Israel and residents of East Jerusalem are receiving vaccinations through the Israeli program.)

Dr. Ali Abed Rabbo, a senior official in the authority’s Health Ministry, said that the Palestinians hope to receive two million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine in February. They also expect the global vaccine-sharing system Covax to deliver 60,000 doses in the first quarter of 2021 and nearly two million more during the rest of the year.

United Nations officials have asked Israel to provide the Palestinians with some vaccines to help protect their medical workers, said Gerald Rockenschaub, the head of the World Health Organization’s mission to the Palestinians.

But Israel indicated to the United Nations officials that it could not send vaccines to the Palestinians yet because it was dealing with a shortage of shots for its own citizens, Mr. Rockenschaub said.





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