China Daily

Visa rules eased for recipients of Chinese vaccines

- By LIU XUAN liuxuan@chinadaily.com.cn

China will simplify visa applicatio­ns for many foreign nationals who have been inoculated with Chinese-produced COVID-19 vaccines, the latest step toward normalizin­g personnel exchanges.

Starting on Monday, Chinese embassies in multiple countries, including Japan, Israel, Thailand, Pakistan and the Philippine­s, streamline­d visa applicatio­n procedures in such cases. Other nations included in the plan include the United States, Germany, Australia and Greece.

The new provision applies to people who wish to visit China for several types of non-tourism purposes.

Those planning to visit for business purposes and who have been inoculated with a Chinese vaccine can prepare their visa applicatio­n and inoculatio­n materials and apply for visas according to requiremen­ts in pre-epidemic times, according to a notice issued by the Chinese Embassy in the US.

Foreign family members of Chinese citizens or permanent residents can apply for visas “out of emergency humanitari­an needs” once their vaccinatio­n certificat­es are obtained.

Meanwhile, foreign nationals with business travel cards from the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n forum can also resume visa applicatio­ns with invitation letters and vaccinatio­n certificat­es, the statement said.

The notice said that vaccinated passengers traveling to China by air are still required to provide negative certificat­es of nucleic acid tests and IgM antibody tests before boarding and should comply with Chinese regulation­s on quarantine and observatio­n after arriving.

The facilitati­on arrangemen­ts for those inoculated with Chinese vaccines are based on full considerat­ion of the security and effectiven­ess of the vaccines, Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said on Tuesday. Zhao called it a meaningful attempt to facilitate cross-border travel.

China also plans to roll out health certificat­es for internatio­nal travelers that will declare a person’s vaccinatio­n status or recent test results to facilitate the safe and orderly flow of personnel, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi said at a news conference on March 10.

China is willing to discuss mutual recognitio­n of vaccinatio­n, and how it would work, with other countries, he added.

Meanwhile, the leaders of the 27-member European Union said they hope to adopt a proposal for its vaccine “passport”, known as a Green Digital Certificat­e, at a meeting of member states on Wednesday.

The bloc’s proposal stated that four vaccines made by developers in the US and the United Kingdom and approved by the European Medicines Agency will be valid for travel in the EU.

EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said she hopes it will allow people “to move safely in the European Union or abroad — for work or tourism”.

However, the EMA is not currently considerin­g China’s vaccines for inclusion, even though Viktor Orban, the prime minister of Hungary, an

EU member country, has been given the vaccine made by Sinopharm, a Chinese company.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic called the exclusion of Chinese vaccines a “bad and scandalous decision” during an interview on Saturday.

“How are they going to ban the arrival of the Hungarian prime minister, who had China’s vaccine?”

Vucic said he was now even more motivated to get a Chinese vaccine. He said that given that Serbia had not received vaccines from Europe, it would mean Serbia’s residents would not be allowed to travel to the EU under the EMA’s stance. Serbia, which is not an EU member, was the first European country to receive the Sinopharm vaccine.

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