JAKARTA, KOMPAS.com – Indonesia will add the physically vulnerable, such as breastfeeding mothers and those with pre-existing conditions to its list of people eligible for the Covid-19 vaccine, two months before the government will vaccinate the public next April.
The government will take the step, as the number of Covid-19 cases surged to over 1.2 million people, since the pandemic was first detected on March 2.
And the Indonesian Embassy in Rome, Italy, helped bring about the release of two Indonesia sailors who were caught by Libyan militants in September 2020. Read on to get the details of these stories, as curated by our editors:
Ministry of Health Permits Vaccinating Physically Vulnerable Members of the Public
The Indonesian Ministry of Health has expanded the categories of vulnerable members of the public who are eligible to receive a Covid-19 vaccine, after the government authorized the vaccination of the elderly against the pandemic earlier this week.
“Aside from the elderly, the [Ministry] authorized the [Covid-19] vaccine for breastfeeding mothers, people with pre-existing conditions, as well as those overlooked in the vaccine drive,” said Health Ministry official Muhammad Budi Hidayat.
Speaking on Friday, February 12, Budi noted that the “addition of vulnerable segments of the population was made following the approval of the Food and Drug Agency or BPOM,” he added.
“The factors to determine their eligibility for the vaccine includes a prior check of their health records. The vaccinations will also follow the procedures for the Covid-19 vaccination.” Budi noted that the dosage of the vaccines vary according to their age.
“For instance, the elderly should be given two vaccine dosages 28 days apart, while those with hypertension can be vaccinated unless their blood pressure exceeded 180/110 MmHg. Those with pre-existing conditions, such as diabetes, can be vaccinated if they showed no acute complications.”
He added that Covid-19 and cancer survivors can be vaccinated more than three months after their illness. The Ministry of Health also encouraged health services in Indonesia’s 34 provinces to use the PCare apps to screen and register recipients of the vaccine.
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Covid-19 Cases in Indonesia Surged to More Than 1.2 Million
Indonesia’s Covid-19 Task Force has announced that case numbers from the pandemic surged to 1,201,859 people, after the country’s coronavirus cases hit one million at the end of January.
“This number of cases came about, after 9,869 contracted Covid-19 over the past 24 hours to Friday, February 12. Of this number, 32,656 people died after the number of fatalities reached 275 during this period of time,” said the team.
“1,004,117 people recovered from Covid-19, after the 11 thousand people were given a clean bill of health after they tested negative in PCR or other tests over 24 hours. This left the number of active cases at 165,086 people.” On the other hand, the number of suspect cases are estimated at 76,505.
The Covid-19 pandemic has been traced in 505 regencies and cities throughout Indonesia’s 34 provinces from Aceh to Papua.
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Indonesia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs Releases Two Indonesians Held Hostage in Libya
The Indonesian Embassy in Rome, Italy have secured the release of two Indonesian sailors who were taken hostage by Libyan militants since the last months of 2020.
“Giri Indra Gunawan and Mohammad Samsudin are expected to arrive in Indonesia on Friday, February 12, a day after Indonesian Ambassador to Italy Esti Andayani repatriated them from Italy,” the embassy announced in a press release to Kompas.com.
“The embassy cooperated with the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Cooperation to bring about their release, as soon as we heard that the men, and their fellow crew members on the ship MP Antartide, were taken hostage by the Libyan National Army [LNA] in September 2020.”
“The Italian government of Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte secured the release of the two and the rest of MP Antartide’s crew on December 17.”
The embassy added that the Covid-19 pandemic delayed Giri and Samsudin’s repatriation by two months. Libya has been torn apart by civil war since the fall and death of strongman Muammar Khaddafi in 2011.
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