Foreign workers who have not been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by December 15 face strict measures from the government, including deportation.
“The decision aims to protect public health, noting that prompting foreign workers to get vaccinated protects them against future infections and disease transmission,” a report from state news agency Petra said, quoting a statement from Jordan’s interior ministry.
Our COVID-19 response focused on building resilient, shock-responsive, inclusive & sustainable social protection systems around the world.
— UNICEF Social Policy (@UNICEFSocPolicy) November 30, 2021
Learn more about the responses in Georgia, Ghana, Guatemala, Jordan, Madagascar, Mongolia, Sri Lanka and Yemen. ⬇️https://t.co/q0wQ9cnbz1
Foreign workers are allowed to receive the vaccine for free, without the need to present their residency or work permits.
A total 4,142,489 individuals have received their first COVID-19 jab, while 3,754,055 are now fully vaccinated, a health ministry briefer noted.
Health officials on Wednesday reported 5,047 new coronavirus infections, putting Jordan’s caseload to 958,990, with 56,991 active cases currently receiving treatment.
Jordan records 4,977 new COVID-19 cases, 24 new deaths#JordanNews #COVID19 https://t.co/lemtlGCYKF pic.twitter.com/Dr7VdqAtSV
— Jordan News (@jordannewsdaily) November 30, 2021
Jordanian authorities earlier declared that the country had entered a third wave of the coronavirus ‘with the increase in the number of delta variant infections and hospital admission rates.’ The second wave occurred during the first quarter of this year.
Authorities have banned travelers South Africa and six other African countries from entering the, with the emergence of the omicron COVID-19 strain from these nations. It was first detected in South Africa.
This article has been adapted from its original source.