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Research from the World Health Organization points to tens of millions of displaced people across the globe who won’t currently be able to access coronavirus vaccines—leading to concerns about the ability of the international community to end the pandemic, The Guardian reported Friday.
Public health experts say that many countries are not accounting for refugees, migrants, and internally displaced people in their plans to vaccinate their populations.
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The WHO reviewed 104 vaccination plans around the world, finding that more than 70% of them excluded migrants. The exclusion means more than 30 million people, including nearly five million in India, where the world’s worst coronavirus outbreak is now taking place, may not have access to the vaccines.
In Indonesia, refugees are among those being “systematically excluded” from the country’s vaccination program, which uses a digital ID system for recipients, journalist Jacob Kushner tweeted.
The plans also excluded about five million refugees and asylum-seekers, including 1.8 million in Colombia, and 11.8 million internally displaced people, including 2.7 million Nigerians—bringing the total number of people with no path to vaccination to more than 46 million.
The failure of governments to plan to vaccinate people who are displaced or migrating “is not an oversight,” tweeted writer John Smith.
“Most of those who live in prosperous nations don’t care if [displaced people] live or die and that doesn’t bode well for us in the long or short term,” Smith said.
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