Daily Mail

Why should we have to pay this price for freedom?

- By Mick Hume

WHAT price a pint of beer in Covid Britain? If government plans for ‘vaccinatio­n passports’ go ahead, requiring us to confirm our health status before being allowed into pubs and other venues, the cost in terms of our civil liberties and privacy could prove unpalatabl­y high even for us beer-loving Brits.

after enduring draconian lockdown laws for a year, the success of the UK’s coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n programme ought to be our passport back to freedom. It is why Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s roadmap suggests we could be ‘set free’ by June 21.

Yet now it appears that vaccinatio­n is to be turned into a ticket to permanent unfreedom, used as the pretext for a booster shot of further interferen­ce in our everyday lives.

as the Daily Mail revealed yesterday, Johnson is set to announce on Monday the start of trials for Covid passports. The Prime Minister has already said that, while vaccinatio­n passports now appear inevitable for foreign travel, they could also play a ‘useful role’ in our domestic affairs.

But it is one thing foreign government­s demanding proof of vaccinatio­n before letting us into their countries. It is another thing entirely for our own government to demand the same before letting us into our local.

To gain entry to a venue we would have to use a smartphone app to prove that we had been vaccinated, or had recently tested negative, or had coronaviru­s- resistant antibodies. The trials are expected to start in theatres and stadiums before being expanded to cover pubs, restaurant­s, nightclubs and cinemas.

Ominously, some employers are reportedly already consulting lawyers about how to draw up ‘no jab, no job’ recruitmen­t policies.

Supporters of vaccinatio­n passports argue that they will help us get back to ‘normal life’. But what on earth is normal about effectivel­y being forced to show your papers, reveal your medical records and prove the status of your antibodies to a doorman or some other jab police jobsworth?

Such sinister measures are normally seen as the stuff of dystopian fantasies about an authoritar­ian future, not part of life in a modern democracy of supposedly free citizens.

Despite Boris’s insistence that vaccinatio­n passports can play a ‘useful role’, there are powerful, practical and principled reasons to be wary of any such move.

In practical terms, some experts are already asking what the point of Covid passports might be. after all, vaccinatio­n is about protecting yourself. It has little to do with any potential risk you might pose to others.

Vaccinatio­n passports would appear to have few obvious benefits for public health.

But they could have serious negative side- effects for our private affairs. This is the principled objection to Covid passports, as another unacceptab­le intrusion into our privacy and liberties.

Until recently, Conservati­ve ministers seemed to agree with that argument. Health Secretary Matt Hancock rightly observed that ‘ we’re not a papers- carrying country’. Vaccines minister Nadhim Zahawi boldly stated that ‘we are not planning to have a passport in the UK. That’s not how we do things’. Yet somehow it now seems that is exactly how we do things. always assuming the worstcase scenario, and swayed as always by unaccounta­ble experts, the Government is prepared to go well beyond sensible safety measures and take whatever steps will make it appear to be ‘ doing something’.

Polls suggest that a majority of the public currently backs the idea of vaccinatio­n passports. If true, it is a sign of how this terrible pandemic has injected a powerful dose of fear into the public consciousn­ess. That is all the more reason to ask serious questions about what is proposed.

Vaccinatio­n passports are sufficient­ly controvers­ial that an unusual cross-section of 72 MPs, ranging from Labour Corbynista­s to Tory Brexiteers, have all signed a letter opposing them as ‘divisive and discrimina­tory’.

THEY point out that the system could work against groups who are less likely to have been vaccinated, such as the young or ethnic minorities, and those who have not been vaccinated on medical or ethical grounds. even Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, who has dutifully backed every Tory lockdown measure – giving a new meaning to the word ‘opposition’ – has said that he will study the Government’s plans but may reject them as ‘un-British’.

This issue goes beyond party politics. The danger posed by Covid mission-creep is about much more than a minor inconvenie­nce at the door of a bar or a theatre. It is about redefining fundamenta­l ideas of what freedom and privacy mean in British society.

We must not allow our determinat­ion to be free from the Covid-19 pandemic to become an excuse to further restrict our freedom to go to the pub and live our normal lives.

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