By JOSEF FEDERMAN
JERUSALEM (AP) — After jumping out to a quick start in its vaccination campaign, Israel announced Tuesday that it has decided to share a small surplus of its coronavirus vaccines with several friendly countries.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision to share the vaccines with his diplomatic partners comes at a time when Israel has come under international criticism for not providing significant quantities to the Palestinians. He also faced accusations from a rival of acting unilaterally and wasting taxpayer funds.
Netanyahu’s move is the latest illustration of how coronavirus vaccines have emerged as a kind of , with countries that have the medicines using their supplies for political gain.
While Israel does not produce vaccines, Netanyahu has moved aggressively to secure enough vaccines for Israel’s 9.3 million people in deals with Pfizer and Moderna. In just under two months, Israel has vaccinated roughly half its population, one of the highest per capita rates in the world, and is aiming to have virtually all of its adults fully vaccinated by the end of next month.
“Our supply is beyond what is needed by the citizens of Israel,” Netanyahu told reporters Tuesday. “We have more than enough to help where we can. It is mostly symbolic.”
Netanyahu’s office said some vaccines would be shared with the Palestinians. But it refused to identify any of the countries it planned to assist.
Israel’s public broadcaster Kan said the countries included Guatemala, Honduras, the Czech Republic and Hungary — nations that have all provided strong diplomatic backing to Netanyahu’s hard-line government in recent years. The report said the vaccines were purchased from Moderna.
In Prague, the Czech prime minister, Andrej Babis, said Israel was donating 5,000 doses to his country after a request for assistance. He said the Moderna vaccines would be given to 2,500 soldiers assisting in Czech hospitals.
In Honduras, President Juan Orlando Hernández tweeted about 5,000 doses coming from Israel. He said they will be reserved for health workers.
An Israeli official confirmed deals with Guatemala, Honduras and the Czech Republic. He said the vaccines were in response to requests from friendly countries, and not in exchange for any diplomatic favors. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter with the media.
Netanyahu’s main rival and governing partner, Defense Minister Benny Gantz, harshly criticized the arrangements, saying they had been reached without any governmental deliberations.
“The fact that Netanyahu trades in vaccines of Israeli citizens that were paid for from their tax money without any accountability shows that he thinks he is running a kingdom and not a state,” Gantz wrote on Twitter.
Israel’s generous supplies of vaccines are in stark contrast to the situation in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. The vast disparities have drawn attention to worldwide inequity in vaccine distribution between rich and poor nations.
The World Health Organization has over the huge gaps, and human rights groups have said Israel is responsible as an occupying force for the wellbeing of Palestinians in those areas. Israel says that under interim peace accords, it has no such responsibility. Israel has vaccinated its own Arab population, including Palestinians in annexed east Jerusalem.
Israel this month of Moderna vaccines to the Palestinian Authority for frontline medical workers in the West Bank, and it has pledged to share a total of 5,000 doses.
But otherwise, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas so far has received just 10,000 doses of the Russian Sputnik V vaccine. An Abbas rival, meanwhile, organized the delivery of an additional 20,000 doses of the Russian vaccine to the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip this week from the United Arab Emirates.
Together, these doses are a tiny fraction of what the Palestinians need. Abbas is waiting for larger quantities from a World Health Organization program for poorer nations and other sources, but an exact delivery date is unclear.
Both Russia and China have developed their own vaccines and used their supplies to .
Earlier this week, Israeli media reported that Netanyahu had to pay Russia $1.2 million to provide Sputnik V vaccines to Syria in exchange for the freedom of a young Israeli woman who had crossed the border into the enemy country.
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Marlon González in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, contributed reporting.