Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

EU mulls Covid certificat­es to open up travel

- Agencies BOOST FOR TOURISM

BRUSSELS/GENEVA: The European Parliament on Thursday agreed with plans for a Covid-19 certificat­e and how it should work, taking the EU closer to launching a document to open up travel within the bloc.

Europe intends to have a certificat­e showing the bearer’s vaccinatio­n status, Covid-19 test results and/or evidence of having survived the disease up until June, in time for the continent’s summer vacation period.

While technical work has been ongoing to ensure the certificat­e is recognised across all 27 EU member states, final details have to be worked out involving capitals, the European Commission and the parliament.

The first change MEPS have called for to a commission proposal is the name. Instead of a “digital green certificat­e” they want to call it an “EU Covid-19 certificat­e” - to avoid any implicatio­n of it becoming a “vaccine passport”.

They said the document should “neither serve as travel document nor become a preconditi­on to exercise the right to free movement” and should only be in use for 12 months.

Stressing that the certificat­e should not result in discrimina­tion, parliament demanded that Covid-19 tests for travel should be free of charge.

The parliament’s negotiatio­n position was announced on Thursday following a vote late on Wednesday, with 540 MEPS in favour, 119 against, and 31 abstention­s. European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen welcomed the result, but ignored the proposed renaming of the certificat­e.

82% of vaccines given in richer countries: WHO

The head of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) has pointed out that more than 1 billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines have been administer­ed globally, but as much as 82% of them were given in high and uppermiddl­e-income countries. The WHO’S director-general Tedros Adhanom said that just 0.3% of all vaccines administer­ed was given to people in low-income nations.

“That’s the reality,” Tedros told an online health conference hosted by Portugal. He said access to vaccines “is one of the defining challenges of the pandemic” and that public health is “the foundation of social, economic and political stability”.

France to reopen cafes, bars, museums from May

French cafes, cultural venues and businesses that have been closed due to the pandemic will reopen in several phases from May 19, President Emmanuel Macron said on Thursday, as he announced a four-stage calendar for reopening the country.

Museums, theatres, cinemas and concert halls will reopen on May 19, along with non-essential shops and outdoor seating at cafes and restaurant­s, Macron told regional French newspapers in a highly-anticipate­d announceme­nt.

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