Fighting fears of vaccines high up in Turkey’s mountains

Turkish doctor Sergan Saraçoğlu faces the twin hurdles of a snowstorm in the mountains and local fears of vaccines as he chases after alarmed villagers with a metal case full of needles.

"She had a positive attitude," the doctor says after finally tracking down a 101-year-old grandmother on his list of the elderly due a coronavirus shot in the southeastern Turkish hamlet of İmamlı.

"But we also have some people who refuse to be vaccinated."

Turkey's 83 million people are fanned out across the vast country - split between Europe and Asia - and inhabit some seemingly impregnable terrain.

The vaccination effort with China's CoronaVac jab kicked off with a bang in mid-January when Turkey inoculated more than half a million people in the first few days.

But it slowed down considerably when doctors left the big cities and tried to reach remote places such as İmamlı and Özbeyli.

Saraçoğlu and his team had to spend an hour wheeling their all-terrain vehicle up dirt roads hugging snow-peaked mountains just to reach a man and two women on their list of those over the age of 65 and due their first shot in Özbeyli.

They never found the man while the two women flatly refused and ran off.

"Thank God we don't have this virus here - it's a clean place with clean air," said Mahmut Şeker.

"That's why people don't want to be vaccinated. Also, they are a little bit afraid."

İmamlı's 101-year-old grandmother Berfo Arsakay had her family treat the doctor's team of three to tea while it waited the required 30 minutes to make sure the shot had no side effects.

"It's very good that they have managed to come," she said chattily from her perch on a rug by the window.

"At first they told me to come to the...

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