Syria Says It Has Received COVID-19 Vaccinations From a 'Friendly Country'
Israeli media have reported that Israel agreed to fund the purchase of Russian vaccines for Syria, its longtime enemy, in order to secure the release last week of an Israeli woman who had been held there

Syria's health minister said on Thursday it had received COVID-19 vaccination doses from a "friendly country" and healthcare workers would start receiving inoculations next week.
Hassan Ghabash's comments, reported by state news agency SANA, did not specify which country provided the vaccines or how many doses had arrived.
Health officials had said Syria was engaged with Russia and China on vaccines but no bilateral deals have been announced yet.
China said earlier this month it would send 150,000 doses of vaccine to Syria as aid but a source told Reuters on Thursday those had not been delivered yet.
- Israel Secretly Agreed to Purchase COVID Vaccines for Syria in Deal to Free Israeli
- Netanyahu's Vaccine Deal With Syria's Assad Will Haunt Him in Dealings With Hamas
- Russia Approves Its Third COVID-19 Vaccine Before Large-scale Clinical Trials
Israeli media have reported that Israel agreed to fund the purchase of Russian vaccines for Syria, its longtime enemy, in order to secure the release last week of an Israeli woman who had been held there.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office has declined to comment on those reports. It also declined comment on reports Syria had received doses from a "friendly" country.
RDIF, the Russian sovereign wealth fund responsible for marketing Russia's Sputnik V vaccine abroad, declined to comment.
Click the alert icon to follow topics:
Comments
ICYMI

Three Years Later, Israelis Find Out What Trump Really Thought of Netanyahu
The Rival Jewish Spies Who Almost Changed the Course of WWII
What Does a Jew Look Like? The Brits Don't Seem to Know
'I Have No Illusions About Ending the Occupation, but the Government Needs the Left'

Russia-Ukraine War Catapults Israeli Arms Industry to Global Stage
