 Back here at home, the Rotary Club of St. Lucia is lending its resources to the national fight against COVID-19. Hama De Mark tells us how. The Rotary Club of St. Lucia has joined vaccination efforts through a collaboration with the Ministry of Health and Wellness. The club contributed the Rotary Bus, a youth mobile clinic, to be used as a vaccination mobile clinic for COVID-19. Selma Sennpreeth, the vice president of the Rotary Club of St. Lucia says she understands the importance of vaccination to restoring some normalcy during the pandemic. With the pandemic that we have now, we find over the whole globe, and even in St. Lucia, the numbers of deaths for the pandemic are too high. And we need you to believe that a number of us have taken the vaccine, both vaccines, and we're doing just great, just fine. Check with your doctors, check with your clinics. They will tell you, they will give you the information. Go online and choose the right information. Get vaccinated. The bus will serve persons of various demographics. It will be utilized on weekends, along with pop-up clinics, in heavily trafficked areas such as markets and malls. The goal is to make vaccines more accessible to the population and provide the opportunity for individuals with busy schedules to get the first and second doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine. On Friday, May 21, 2021, the mobile clinic will be at the VE4 Plaza from 9am to 5pm, and at the Souffres Square on Saturday, May 22, 2021, from 9am to 3pm. The Ministry of Health and Wellness expressed gratitude to the Rotary Club of St. Lucia and the other entities contributing to vaccination efforts in St. Lucia. From the Government Information Service, Homedi Mark reporting.