Tunisia: Barriers to Covid-19 vaccines expose stark disparities in access to health



The Tunisian authorities’ response to the Covid-19 pandemic, particularly their management of the country’s vaccine rollout program, has exposed the entrenched inequality in the country’s healthcare system, Amnesty International said today. 

With the World Health Organization (WHO) warning that new Covid variants may unleash another wave of infections, only 54% of Tunisia’s population have received two doses and only 10% a third. Of those third doses, those living in urban areas received up to 60%, while in many rural regions, vaccination rates for the third shot were as low as 4,5%. 

In a new briefing, Covid-19 vaccines and access to health in rural Tunisia, the organization sets out the significant disparities in vaccination coverage between urban areas along the coast and rural regions of the country. To identify the structural barriers that prevent people in marginalized regions from gaining fair access to vaccines, Amnesty International conducted field research in Ghardimaou, a deprived region located in a mountainous area beside the Tunisian-Algerian border.  

“Today, on the first day of World Immunization Week, we remind the Tunisian authorities of the importance of granting equal access to vaccines and prioritizing the most marginalized. It’s unacceptable in today’s Tunisia that during a pandemic, the rural regions are yet again forgotten and receive less than half the vaccines that urban regions have,” said Amna Guellali, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa.