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Syria Confirms Its First Coronavirus Case: ‘It's Our Worst Nightmare’

For weeks, the Assad government has denied Syria has any coronavirus cases, but health and humanitarian workers suspect it is already widespread.
syria iran coronavirus
Anas Alkharboutli/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images

Syria reported its first case of coronavirus Sunday, confirming the worst fears of humanitarian workers who warn that an outbreak will be an unprecedented catastrophe for the war-ravaged country.

“To have coronavirus on top of war and mass internal displacement is a worst nightmare come true,” Jan Egeland, the Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council, told VICE News.

The pandemic is already creating an emergency in much wealthier countries in Europe and Asia, where healthcare systems are close to buckling under the rush of COVID-19 patients. But, said Egeland, an outbreak would prove many times more devastating in Syria, where more than 6 million people have been displaced, and critical healthcare and other key infrastructure have been destroyed by nearly a decade of war.

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“It needs to be all hands on deck now to avoid Syria becoming an ideal laboratory for the spread of the virus, and a stronghold for the virus that will come back to haunt… all countries on earth,” said Egeland, a former senior adviser to the U.N.’s special envoy for Syria.

READ: No soap, little water, and no way out: Refugee camps brace for coronavirus

For weeks, the government of Bashar Assad has insisted there were no cases of COVID-19 in Syria, despite a regular flow of people into the country from neighboring Iran, one of the global hot spots of the disease, and widespread reports of suspected Syrian cases.

But on Sunday, Health Minister Nizar al-Yaziji confirmed its first case, in a 20-year-old woman who had travelled to Syria from an unspecified country. The government said “appropriate measures” had been taken to deal with the case, and announced a ban on public transport and a prisoner amnesty Sunday, adding to recent lockdown measures including the closure of schools, restaurants, and parks.

Health and humanitarian workers — and even pro-government commentators — believe the virus is far more widespread than Sunday’s announcement acknowledges. Syria hosts thousands of Iranian-backed militia fighters, who regularly travel between Syria and Iran, along with thousands of Shi'ite pilgrims from Iran.

And in the opposition-held northwest, where fighting has displaced a million people have been displaced into camps, huts, and other substandard shelter, doctors said last week they had seen suspected COVID-19 cases, including fatalities, but had lacked the tests to confirm the diagnoses.

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“Of course there are many more cases in Syria,” said Egeland. “You can’t have an enormous pandemic in Iran, many cases in Iraq, without having many in Syria. It’s there, and it's our worst nightmare.”

READ: Iran is downplaying its coronavirus toll, analysts say

He said health services in many parts of the country were “on their knees,” with hundreds of hospitals having been destroyed or abandoned during the fighting.

More than 6 million Syrians had been displaced by the conflict, forced into substandard living arrangements in crowded camps or other informal settlements.

In those conditions, none of the measures health officials recommend to safeguard against the disease — social distancing, washing your hands, getting tested — were possible, much less accessing ventilators or isolation rooms if they needed critical care. “Even water, sanitation and social distancing is a luxury in places like the conflict zones,” he said.

READ: More than 3 million Iranians could die from coronavirus if the outbreak is not controlled

As Syrians approached their “hour of greatest need,” he urged the powerbrokers in the conflict to reach a lasting settlement— “a corona ceasefire” — to end the fighting and allow a medical and humanitarian response to the pandemic.

“I hope we have the sense that this is larger than our political conflicts. This is where we need to make deals that are historic in nature,” he said. “If there’s one thing all sides should be able to agree on, it’s that this will threaten everyone.”

Cover: A member of the Syrian civil defense, also known as the White Helmets, sprays disinfectant outside a hospital during a sterilization campaign for hospitals in the city of Idlib against the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, after the emergence of suspected cases in the province of Idlib. Photo by: Anas Alkharboutli/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images