Covid NSW: Ady Al-Askar's family blame 'slow and confusing' rollout for him not ...

Covid NSW: Ady Al-Askar's family blame 'slow and confusing' rollout for him not ...
Covid NSW: Ady Al-Askar's family blame 'slow and confusing' rollout for him not ...

Pictured: Ady Al-Askar

Pictured: Ady Al-Askar

Relatives of a man who dropped dead in the shower 13 days after receiving a Covid diagnosis have lashed out at the government for the slow and confusing vaccine rollout.

Ady Al-Askar, 27, collapsed and died on Tuesday inside his Liverpool home, in Sydney's south-west.

His angry brother-in-law told Daily Mail Australia the newly-married forklift operator wanted to get vaccinated, but there were several roadblocks that delayed the process.

'It's the fact that the stupid health department had a three month waiting line,' he said.

Mr Al-Askar caught the highly infectious Delta strain off his disability support worker wife, Yasmin, who first contracted the virus through her workplace.

Mrs Al-Askar's brother Fahad Aziz wants the public to know that Mr Al-Askar was not against the vaccine, but was not able to secure an immediate appointment.

He said Mr Al-Askar 'followed all the rules and never disobeyed the law', and wanted to do his bit to end the lockdown by getting vaccinated.

But he claims Mr Al-Askar was told 'he would be waiting until September' due to 'the slow rollout' in the community. 

'When the health department talk about him being unvaccinated it wasn't like the poor man had a choice, he was in a line and I assure you he won't be the only person to die from this tragic pandemic if the vaccine isn't handed out to everyone.

'Australia is the slowest with their vaccine production and are starting to fix their mistakes after people starting losing lives and one of them was my brother.'  

Ady Al-Askar married Yasmin (pictured together) just six weeks ago and the couple were hoping to celebrate after lockdown lifted

Ady Al-Askar married Yasmin (pictured together) just six weeks ago and the couple were hoping to celebrate after lockdown lifted

Until recently, Mr Al-Askar would not have qualified for a vaccination as priority was given to the elderly and frontline workers

Until recently, Mr Al-Askar would not have qualified for a vaccination as priority was given to the elderly and frontline workers

Until recently Mr Al-Askar would not have qualified for a vaccination as priority was given to the elderly and frontline workers. 

But when the Delta strain seeped into the community, Premier Gladys Berejiklian issued an urgent plea for adults of all ages to come forward and get the AstraZeneca vaccine. Both the federal and state governments have come under fire for the conflicting advice regarding the rollout. 

Cumberland Mayor Steve Christou said he and his wife Josephine struggled to book a timely vaccination in their part of western Sydney, where only 17.7 per cent of people are fully vaccinated and 35.1 per cent have had a first dose.

'I don't think it's as easy for people to book an appointment in western Sydney and get vaccinated as easy as it is in the more affluent suburbs,' he said on Wednesday.  

Mr Al-Askar's cousin, Khalid Thijeel, earlier told Daily Mail Australia that the 27-year-old was absolutely not an anti-vaxxer, but was wary of potential long term effects the vaccine might have. 

The 27-year-old had been isolating in his Liverpool unit in Sydney's southwest with his aged care nurse wife, Yasmin (pictured together), who first contracted the virus and brought it home from work

The 27-year-old had been isolating in his Liverpool unit in Sydney's southwest with his aged care nurse wife, Yasmin (pictured together), who first contracted the virus and brought it home from work

Given his youth, he said Mr Al-Askar wasn't overly concerned about the extended wait times to get the jab. 

Mr Thijeel stressed his cousin was hesitant after mixed messaging from the Federal Government which initially told Australians the AstraZeneca jab was not safe for people under the age of 60.

'He was young, and it's my understanding he wanted to see what long-term effects there were… he doesn't have children yet, but would it affect them',' he said.

'He was just waiting to see'.  

The Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation's latest advice states that increased transmissibility of the Delta variant outweighs any minor risks associated with the AstraZeneca jab. 

'In a large outbreak, the benefits of the COVID-19 vaccine AstraZeneca are greater than the risk of rare side effects for all age groups,' the advice states.

'ATAGI reiterates that all adults in greater Sydney should strongly consider the benefits of earlier protection with COVID-19 Vaccine AstraZeneca rather than waiting for alternative vaccines.'   

Pictured: Mr Al-Askar on his wedding day, just six weeks ago

Pictured: Mr Al-Askar on his wedding day, just six weeks ago

Sydney's vaccine divide: NSW government is accused of giving MORE jabs to city's north and east - as furious mayor says it takes 30 DAYS to get vaccinated in south-west hotspot 

Sydney's south-west, taking in the Liverpool and Fairfield council areas, has eastern Australia's lowest metropolitan vaccination rate despite being in a Covid hotspot.

Just 14.6 per cent who those aged 16 and over have had two doses, with 33.1 per cent so far receiving one injection. 

On the other side of the city, 26.9 per cent of people are fully vaccinated on the North Shore where a majority, or 51.9 per cent, have had one dose, federal Department of Health data shows.

In the eastern suburbs, where the

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