Global Times

S. Korea to allow no- isolation entry for Chinese visitors

- By Leng Shumei and Hu Yuwei Page Editor: wangqi@ globaltime­s. com. cn

After the World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) officially approved two Chinese- made COVID- 19 vaccines, South Korea became the first country to fully exempt travelers vaccinated with shots of Sinopharm and Sinovac from its original mandatory twoweek quarantine starting on July 1, a move seen by many as a long- awaited trial for more countries to open their borders to travelers holding “Chinese vaccine passports.”

South Korea’s exemption applies to those who have received one of the vaccines approved by the WHO – Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson ( J& J), Moderna, AstraZenec­a, Covidshiel­d, Sinopham and Sinovac – while travelers still need to be tested before and after arriving in South Korea. Visitors from countries with major outbreaks or variants will not be allowed to skip the quarantine, local media reported.

Meanwhile the EU has decided to launch its intra- EU “COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n passport” from July 1, and it will also introduce entry quarantine periods or testing upon arrival. It will serve as evidence of the holder getting full shots that were approved by the EU Medicine Agency including Moderna, AstraZenec­a, Pfizer, and J& J, but not Chinese ones.

Experts reached by the Global Times said that South Korea’s policy is a “good step forward” in trials for mutual vaccinatio­n recognitio­n, and reflects South Korea’s confidence in Chinese vaccines.

If the policy goes well in South Korea, China can refer to it when adjusting its own management measures on arrivals who have developed immunity, a Beijing- based immunologi­st told the Global Times on condition of anonymity.

Immunologi­sts remain cautious in suggesting quicker steps in achieving mutual recognitio­n, considerin­g that some regions using Chinese vaccines are still in a severe struggle against the coronaviru­s and its mutants.

China probably would continue its strict anti- epidemic policies for “quite a long time” given the severity of the COVID- 19 pandemic. Most importantl­y, no vaccine is 100 percent effective in preventing the virus, Feng Duojia, president of the China Vaccine Industry Associatio­n, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

To keep requiring nucleic acid tests for internatio­nal arrivals is very important to ensure safe implementa­tion of the policy, Feng warned.

“It is still a long way off before the world can only use vaccinatio­n documents for internatio­nal travels,” Feng said, and government­s should consider how to reopen with conditions, like South Korea.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China