Libya receives Russian Sputnik V vaccine, PM Dbeibah hails delivery
Workers handle boxes of the newly received first batch of the Russian Sputnik V vaccine against the coronavirus, before stockpiling them in refrigerated units inside the storage facilities of the Libyan health ministry, in the capital Tripoli, Libya, April 4, 2021. (AFP Photo)


War-ravaged Libya received more than 100,000 doses of Russian coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V, with the country's health ministry announcing that the first shipment with jabs landed at Tripoli's Mitiga airport Sunday.

Around 1,000 new infections are announced daily by the National Center for Disease Control, posing a challenge to a health sector ravaged by years of conflict.

"It is the first drop of rain. Thank God, we are able to supply the first batch of corona vaccine," interim Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah said in a tweet. "The rest of the shipment will arrive in succession," he added, without giving details of how many more doses were due.

A box of the vaccine was shown being unloaded from a cargo plane in a social media post by the health ministry, saying it would be moved to the ministry's warehouses before distribution. In February, the disease control center launched an electronic registration campaign for vaccinations for those aged over 18.

No details on the numbers of those registering have been disclosed.

Libya has a population of around 6.5 million. Libya has recorded almost 200,000 infections since the outbreak of the pandemic and 2,684 deaths, according to the latest data from the diseases center.

Libya has been torn by division and violence for a decade since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising against Moammar Gadhafi and split between warring western and eastern factions in 2014. Dbeibah's new U.N.-backed unity government took office last month with a mandate to improve services and prepare for a national election in December.