Gulf Today Report
There are many ways of saying 'thank you.' But perhaps nothing could be more heartening than what a Syrian doctor in England has done. His deportation was halted by the UK’s first Covid lockdown, so he volunteered to help vaccinate people against the deadly virus after he was granted leave to stay in the UK.
It's a payback which many will appreciate.
READ MORE
Abu Dhabi's first volunteers take Russian COVID-19 vaccine in UAE trials
VIDEO: Four dead, 52 arrested after Trump supporters ransack Congress
COVID-19 vaccine available at 97 health centres in Abu Dhabi
Dr Bashar Al Hana has been living in Darlington for almost two years after arriving in England seeking asylum from his war-torn homeland, according to the Independent.
He had been due to be deported back to Poland – his point of entry into Europe – last spring but the flight was cancelled amid the global shutdown brought about by the pandemic.
Now, after winning his battle to stay in the UK for five years, the 36-year-old has volunteered to help in the NHS' mass vaccination programme.
If the offer is accepted, he will administer jabs as he awaits his General Medical Council exams, which would allow him to work as a doctor in UK.
“It will be a nice opportunity to get into the hospital environment,” he told the Northern Echo. “But it is a very, very important job and I am lucky.”
He also paid tribute to those who had helped him in the year since the planned deportation.
They included the Darlington Assistance for Refugees charity and the northeast town’s Conservative MP Peter Gibson, who took up his case.
“My new family here have helped so much, and now I have received the hope that I can stop running, stop moving around from country to country and place to place,” said Dr Al Hana. “That's the key to starting to have a normal life again."