US helps Bahamas distribute COVID-19 vaccines to eight Family Islands

US helps Bahamas distribute COVID-19 vaccines to eight Family Islands
Rhode Island National Guard (RING) personnel help board their C-12 aircraft with Ministry of Health medical personnel and volunteers before departing on the first day of a joint five-day mission to distribute COVID-19 vaccines doses to eight Family Islands, Monday, April 26, 2021. (PHOTO: US EMBASSY NASSAU)

NASSAU, BAHAMAS — On Monday, April 26, 2021, the United States and The Bahamas began a joint five-day mission to distribute COVID-19 vaccine doses to eight of the Family Islands: Mayaguana, Acklins, Crooked Island, Cat Island, Long Island, Inagua, Bimini and Eleuthera.

A Rhode Island National Guard C-12 aircraft prepares to take off from Odyssey International Airport on the way to Mayaguana, the first stop in a joint five-day mission to distribute COVID-19 vaccines to eight Family Islands across The Bahamas, on Monday, April 26, 2021. (PHOTO: US EMBASSY NASSAU)

The mission will span five days, from April 26 to 30, and the first day of the mission alone will distribute 3,200 vaccine doses to Bahamians in need on remote islands. The effort highlights just how deep and how wide the partnership between the United States and The Bahamas goes.

Their first stop, Monday morning, was the remote island of Mayaguana, nearly 330 miles from New Providence.

The US Embassy partnered with the Rhode Island National Guard, The Bahamas’ COVID-19 Vaccine Coordination Committee, the Ministry of Health and health providers on the ground on the various islands to carry out the joint mission.

The Rhode Island National Guard provided the aircraft for the mission — a C-12 plane capable of carrying 1650lbs of passenger and cargo plus aircrew. US Northern Command (NORTHCOM) pitched in with a donation of specialized coolers, valued at $40,000, for properly transporting vaccine doses and keeping them viable. The Bahamas’ COVID-19 Vaccine Consultative Committee worked with the Ministry of Health to determine a distribution plan and the locations most in need, and the US Embassy brought everyone together to help execute the joint mission.

US Chargé d’Affaires Usha Pitts (right) and Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis walk out onto the tarmac at Odyssey International Airport to see off the first flight of a joint five-day mission to distribute thousands of COVID-19 vaccine doses to eight Family Islands throughout The Bahamas, Monday, April 26, 2021. (PHOTO: US EMBASSY NASSAU)

US Chargé d’Affaires Usha Pitts and Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis met at Odyssey International Airport for the launch of the mission, along with Chairperson of the National COVID-19 Vaccine Consultative Committee Dr Merceline Dahl-Regis, US Embassy Senior Defense Official Commander Kevin Self, Major Philip Aubin of the Rhode Island National Guard and other key members of the joint effort.

Since 2006, the Rhode Island National Guard has partnered with The Bahamas, primarily the Royal Bahamas Defence Force (RBDF), through the Department of Defense’s State Partnership Program (SPP). The SPP pairs the National Guard of a US state or territory with a partner country’s military and security forces but can assist in other areas as well.

For example, in addition to the vaccine distribution mission, in June of 2020 the RING also donated $20,000 worth of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and bi-level positive airway pressure (BiPAP) machines to the Ministry of Health, converted to ventilators for use as treatment for respiratory distress due to COVID-19.