Palestinians expect to receive their first batch of the COVID-19 vaccine by the weekend.
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The Palestinian Authority has ordered Russia's Sputnik V vaccine and hopes to administer it to 50,000 residents by March, after last week granting the drug emergency approval.
The PA governs parts of Judea and Samaria in partial coordination with Israel, whose vaccination campaign has been the world's fastest. By Tuesday morning, 28% of Israel's 9 million citizens had received at least one dose.
Israel has not extended the program, which uses vaccines by Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna, to the 3.1 million Palestinians in Judea and Samaria or the 2.1 million in the Gaza Strip, which is run by the Hamas terrorist organization sworn to Israel's destruction.
Abdel Hafiz Nofal, Palestinian ambassador to Russia, said it would send 5,000 vaccine doses to Judea and Samaria "by the end of the week" and would not charge for the initial consignment.
"We are working to seal an agreement with the Russian government to buy 100,000 doses, which are enough to vaccinate 50,000 people," Nofal told Reuters.
Nofal envisaged the deal taking place in February, and said 100,000 was the most Moscow could sell the PA that month.
Israel's Health Ministry said it had approved the import.
An Israeli official said earlier that the first batch of Sputnik V doses could arrive on Tuesday, through the border with Jordan, but later said there had been a hold-up.
Russia's standard export price for the two-dose Sputnik V is $18 but the cash-strapped PA was trying to negotiate a discount, Nofal said.
Palestinian health officials said the first in line for the vaccines would be medical personnel, the elderly and those with chronic diseases – in Gaza as well as in Judea and Samaria.
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