China Daily

No cheers for vaccine passports at British pubs

- By JONATHAN POWELL in London jonathan@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Figures from the United Kingdom’s hospitalit­y industry and a group of Conservati­ve politician­s have roundly rejected as “unworkable” a proposal from Prime Minister Boris Johnson that pubs could turn away customers who cannot prove they have been vaccinated.

Johnson made his proposal to a liaison committee of senior members of Parliament that is reviewing the idea of whether people should have to show so-called vaccine passports or negative tests as lockdown measures ease.

Johnson made the comments ahead of a vote in the Parliament on Thursday that extended some parts of emergency COVID-19 legislatio­n, known as the Coronaviru­s Act, to the end of September.

The act, which was passed a year ago as the country went into lockdown, includes temporary powers that allow authoritie­s to bar protests, shut down businesses and restrict travel.

Some backbench MPs have denounced the act as “the most draconian detention powers in modern British legal history”, though the extension vote still passed with support of the opposition Labour Party.

One vocal critic is MP Steve Baker, who was quoted by the Daily Telegraph as saying that the plans for vaccine passports could lead to a “twotier Britain that prevents pregnant women from taking part in society”.

“First, they said we’ll need them to watch the football, and today that it may be papers for the pub,” he added.

It was a “ghastly trap that we must not fall into”, he said.

When asked at a committee hearing on Wednesday about the possibilit­y of a vaccine passport program for pubs, Johnson said: “I think that’s the kind of thing that may be up to individual publicans. It may be up to the landlord. The basic concept of vaccine certificat­ion should not be totally alien to us.”

Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitalit­y, said the idea would be unworkable. “It’s crucial that visiting the pub and other parts of hospitalit­y should not be subject to mandatory vaccinatio­n certificat­ion,” she said in a social media post.

“It is simply unworkable, would cause conflict between staff and customers and almost certainly result in breaches of equality rules.”

The chief executive of a major pub chain warned the concept could lead to issues around “discrimina­tion” and “data protection”.

Speaking to the BBC’s Today program, Jonathan Neame, chief of Shepherd Neame, said he would not make vaccine certificat­ion a mandatory condition for people to visit his pubs. “The whole essence of a pub is that they are diverse and inclusive environmen­ts, where everybody, and families in particular, are extremely welcome,” he said.

“It’s absolutely fine to exclude people where there is a situation of bad behavior or drunkennes­s, and that’s already enshrined in law, but if you’re going to exclude people for what they are, or what they have not done, that’s a wholly different issue which does touch on discrimina­tion, civil liberties, and in this case data protection issues.”

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