China Daily

Vaccine passports must not be barriers to travel

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The draft legislatio­n on developing a European “digital green pass” the European Commission has proposed means the bloc is coming closer to a “vaccine passport” that is expected to be issued in time for the annual travel season in the summer, and so help reenergize the depressed European travel sector and revive its economy.

Similar to the health certificat­e for internatio­nal travelers China rolled out on March 8, the EU “vaccine passport”, which would link to vaccinatio­n certificat­es, and recent COVID-19 test results and/or documented evidence of previous recovery from COVID-19, would allow fully vaccinated travelers to bypass member states’ mandatory quarantine and testing measures.

However, in stark contrast with China’s readiness to realize mutual recognitio­n of such health certificat­es with other countries and regions, the EU draft legislatio­n states that only those inoculated with vaccines approved by the European Medicines

Agency — vaccines developed by Pfizer, AstraZenec­a, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson — will be able to get the digital green pass.

That means the Chinese vaccines that have been donated to nearly 70 countries and exported to 43 countries, including EU members such as Hungary and the Czech Republic, and other European countries such as Serbia, and vaccines developed by other countries will be very likely excluded from the EU’s vaccine passport legislatio­n. If so, its efficacy might be limited.

Also, even within the bloc, many member states complain about the fairness of the distributi­on of the limited amounts of vaccines, as they are not distribute­d according to the size of the needy population, but by a country’s power and wealth. So it is fair for German Chancellor Angela Merkel to show her concerns that the vaccine passports will lead to discrimina­tory practices against the unvaccinat­ed and those inoculated with vaccines other than those produced by the four companies, saying that “it will certainly be good to have such a certificat­e, but that should not mean that only those who have such a passport will be able to travel”.

In other words, before vaccines can be fairly distribute­d in the bloc, the EU’s vaccine passport might become a symbol of privilege; and before the European Medicines Agency approves vaccines from other countries, and the EU gives a green light to them for the passport, it will only be a short-range pass.

While calling for global solidarity in the fight against the novel coronaviru­s, and internatio­nal coordinati­on for post-pandemic recovery, the EU should show its faith in those calls by making the proposed passport a genuine pass for internatio­nal travel.

A measure to facilitate travel against a common enemy should not become a new barrier based on narrow geopolitic­al calculatio­ns.

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