The Star Malaysia - Star2

Pushing for EU vaccine certs

- By SAMUEL PETREQUIN

AS strict lockdowns are loosened across Europe and many European Union citizens dream about holidays in the sun, the 27-nation bloc has yet to agree on how to quickly implement a virus certificat­e scheme to boost summer travel and tourism.

European affairs ministers gathered earlier this week in Brussels, Belgium to assess progress in discussion­s with European lawmakers and expressed their optimism that trans-border travel passes will be approved soon.

A deal between the Parliament and EU countries is required in May to ensure the system facilitati­ng free movement within the EU during the Covid-19 pandemic will be up and running by the end of June, but several sticking points remain.

When it proposed the scheme in March, the EU Commission said coronaviru­s certificat­es would be given to EU residents who can prove they have been vaccinated or those who tested negative for the virus or have proof they recovered from it.

EU lawmakers and nations agree on that, but the Parliament insists that Covid-19 certificat­es should be enough to allow EU citizens to move about freely and that EU countries shouldn’t be allowed to impose extra restrictio­ns on certificat­e holders such as quarantine­s, tests or self-isolation measures.

That’s a major roadblock, since border controls are a national responsibi­lity.

A senior EU official, speaking anonymousl­y as is custom before the meeting, said EU nations had different opinions on the topic and the bloc was working to find a universal solution. The official said the pressure was on since vaccinatio­ns were increasing across Europe and more and more people wanted to travel.

The European Commission hopes that about 70% of the EU’S adult population will be vaccinated by the end of the summer.

The Parliament has also raised concerns about the price of the PCR coronaviru­s tests that could be included in the certificat­es, which will be available in a digital or paper format with a QR code. EU citizens will get the pass for free but the price of tests vary widely across the bloc.

EU lawmakers said member states should “ensure universal, accessible, timely and free-of-charge testing” to avoid discrimina­tion against those who have yet to be vaccinated.

Ana Paula Zacarias, Portugal’s secretary of state for EU Affairs, noted “very good” technical discussion­s with the Parliament but said a fixed common price for the tests cannot be imposed. Portugal currently chairs the rotating presidency of the Council of the EU.

“It’s a free market, we can only try to see if there is a possibilit­y that the price of the tests can be lowered,” she said.

Lawmakers agreed with the European Commission that all vaccines approved by the European Medicines Agency, the EU’S drug regulator, should be automatica­lly recognised. So far that includes vaccines from Astrazenec­a, Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson. They also offered EU countries the possibilit­y of including other vaccines listed by the World Health Organizati­on for emergency use, which would include China’s Sinopharm vaccine.

The EU has already begun working on the technical aspects of the vaccine certificat­e scheme.

Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic said the certificat­es could also be useful at a later stage to help the 27-nation bloc reopen to visitors from outside the EU.

“I think in the end it will be needed on a wider scale,” he said.

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