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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Asharq Al-Awsat

As Opposition-Held Syria Fears Virus, Just One Machine is there to Test

Turkish humanitarian group IHH on April 6, 2020, aid workers check the temperature of Syrian children at a camp for internally displaced persons in northern Syria. (AP)

A single machine at Mohamad Shahim Makki’s medical center in Idlib province, part of Syria’s last opposition stronghold, is the only alarm that will sound when the coronavirus strikes a population of millions of the world’s most vulnerable people.

Makki’s Epidemiological Surveillance Laboratory has the only device in areas outside of Syrian regime control equipped to run a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test to detect the virus, reported Reuters. As of a few days ago, just 120 tests had been carried out on just 300 samples.

While all have been negative so far, doctors and relief agencies fear that crowded camps for displaced people, and medical facilities ravaged by years of war, would make any contagion rapid and lethal.

Samples have begun to come into the lab faster, with 5,000 received in the last two days, though it is not yet clear how many of them can be processed or how quickly.

The machine “is not sufficient to serve all these people, so there is pressure on the device. And since it is the only one, strict criteria are being used to select samples,” said Makki.

Northwest Syria is the last part of the country still held by fighters trying to overthrow Bashar Assad’s regime. It is home to more than 3 million people, most of whom fled other parts of Syria in a war that began nine years ago.

“If coronavirus spreads in the northwest it will be a catastrophe. The number of deaths will be very big and infections will be huge, in the hundreds of thousands,” Ahmad al-Dbis of the US-based medical charity UOSSM, which operates in opposition territory, told Reuters last month.

Plans to equip other centers with PCR test devices have been slowed by their high cost and the training needed to run them.

“In the liberated areas we have major weaknesses in the health sector because of the war and because of the systematic targeting of hospitals and health centers,” said Makki.

The regime, backed by Russia and Iran, launched a push earlier this year to capture Idlib, sending hundreds of thousands of residents fleeing, many of them people who were already displaced.

In recent days thousands of Syrians have begun to leave camps near the Turkish border, some wary of the virus reaching tightly packed quarters, choosing instead to return to Idlib after a ceasefire struck last month that has restored calm.

In the rest of Syria, Damascus has reported 25 coronavirus cases and two deaths in regime-held areas. It has shut businesses, halted flights, and imposed a curfew to curb the spread of the virus.

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