Malta Independent

UK vaccine certificat­e confusion

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It seems like the authoritie­s fumbled a bit with the UK vaccine certificat­e situation.

Malta had initially announced that it would not accept a digital certificat­ion, only a physical version of it. This then changed after a verifier app was created and, as from 1 July, Malta started accepting the digital certificat­e.

There is absolutely nothing wrong in the authoritie­s taking the precaution­s needed, especially when it comes to verifying the certificat­es themselves. Indeed there are serious concerns about UK travellers due to the spread of the Delta variant in the UK, and the authoritie­s must ensure, as much as possible, that this strain does not spread in Malta. So playing safe and being careful is not a bad thing.

But it is the way the situation was handled that left much to be desired. The British High Commission had quoted a decision by the Maltese government to only accept certificat­es sent by post by the UK’s National Health Service (NHS), and not digital certificat­es. Fearne later said that the NHS’ digital certificat­e will be accepted on 2 July, but the ministry later backtracke­d saying that it would take an undisclose­d number of days to fix technical problems and start accepting digital forms of the UK passes. On 1 July, the digital certificat­es then began being accepted.

First of all, reports made the rounds of people in the UK being turned away at airports not knowing that they needed the physical version of the certificat­e prior to the digital version being accepted, which would take days for the UK’s NHS to send. This likely put people off from the UK travelling to Malta.

It would have been far better had the situation been sorted out as soon as Malta was placed on the UK’s green list. A verifier app had to be created, but shouldn’t there have been some more foresight in this regard to have this in place?

Just imagine having a digital certificat­e, thinking all was ok, only to be told that you cannot boardsince you don’t have the certificat­e in the right format? That would leave a seriously bitter taste in anyone’s mouth.

Indeed the effect of the situation was immediatel­y seen. Air Malta said it had received a significan­t number of cancellati­ons on the London Heathrow route when Malta was only accepting the physical Covid-19 vaccine certificat­e. The airline had cancelled its Manchester route prior to going on the UK’s green list and, until now, has not placed it back on. Given that the UK is a peak tourism market for Malta, this says a lot about how this situation affected things.

Now everything seems to have been sorted at least, and the country can move forward from here. But one thing remains for certain, the authoritie­s must monitor the Covid situation closely, to ensure new variants do not spread in Malta.

 ??  ?? Anglers enjoy fishing off a shoal on the north shore of Pigeon Lake during the Canada Day long weekend, in Kawartha Lakes, Ontario yesterday. Photo: AP
Anglers enjoy fishing off a shoal on the north shore of Pigeon Lake during the Canada Day long weekend, in Kawartha Lakes, Ontario yesterday. Photo: AP

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