The Daily Telegraph

WHO warns against using vaccine proof for holidays

- By Charles Hymas Home Affairs editor

SUMMER holidays face a new threat as the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) warned that evidence of Covid vaccinatio­ns should not be used to decide whether people can enter a country.

The WHO said there were still “critical unknowns” about the efficacy of vaccinatio­ns in reducing Covid transmissi­on and preventing the disease even as government­s are working on vaccine certificat­es as a way to kickstart travel. It said that, as a result, national authoritie­s, airlines and travel operators “should not introduce requiremen­ts of proof of Covid-19 vaccinatio­n for internatio­nal travel as a condition for departure or entry”.

The organisati­on said vaccinatio­n should not exempt travellers from having to undergo other “travel risk-reduction measures” such as Covid testing or quarantine.

Vaccinatio­n documents are seen as critical to enable Britons and other holidaymak­ers to travel abroad this summer. In his road map out of lockdown on Monday, Boris Johnson signalled that internatio­nal travel could restart as early as May 17.

He will make a decision after a Department for Transport investigat­ion into how it could be safely done, which is due to report on April 12.

The WHO will, however, only review its position on use of vaccinatio­n proof for entry or departure in three months’ time. Its concerns centre on the efficacy of vaccines in preventing disease and limiting transmissi­on including Covid variants, the length of protection they offer, whether they guard against asymptomat­ic infection and exactly how long before travel vaccines should be offered.

It is also concerned over the potential discrimina­tion against those who might not have, or do not have access to, vaccinatio­ns. Industry sources said government­s, airlines and travel operators were free to ignore the WHO, but it could hinder their use as an alternativ­e to expensive tests or other restrictio­ns.

Greece and Israel have already agreed to recognise Covid vaccinatio­n certificat­es for travel between the two countries while the UK and most EU government­s are considerin­g or developing similar digital documents.

The WHO has commission­ed experts to help devise internatio­nal standards for the digital certificat­es, which would be similar to yellow fever cards, despite its concern about their applicatio­n but in anticipati­on that they will be a feature of travel.

Trade bodies, like the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA), are concerned that delays by government­s and other agencies in developing vaccinatio­n documents threaten attempts to restart travel in time for the summer.

EU leaders are today expected to confirm a continuing ban on non-essential travel, but senior Commission officials

‘We have to look at the data at every single stage and the road map... makes that abundantly clear’

say “there is a will” to have summer holidays. Spain and Greece are pushing ahead with vaccine certificat­es and have already establishe­d protocols for their use in popular destinatio­ns such as the Canary Islands and the Balearic Islands. They want to go with an Euwide vaccine certificat­e scheme, but that is dependent on the EU hitting their vaccine targets of inoculatin­g 70 per cent of countries’ population­s by late summer.

Priti Patel, the Home Secretary, warned yesterday that it was “far too early” for people to book a holiday abroad, and suggested they should wait for the Government’s global travel task force to report on April 12.

Asked what advice she would give to people thinking about taking an overseas holidays and whether they should book or wait, Ms Patel said: “Well, it’s too early.

“It’s far too early. We have to look at the data at every single stage, and the road map outlined by the Prime Minister makes that abundantly clear.”

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