Business Standard

India calls UK’S travel policy discrimina­tory

Warns of reciprocal action; seeks early resolution of issue

- ANEESH PHADNIS & SOHINI DAS Mumbai, 21 September

India has called the UK government’s move to treat fully vaccinated Indians as unvaccinat­ed a “discrimina­tory policy” and indicated that it has the right to take reciprocal action.

“Covishield is a licensed product of a UK company manufactur­ed in India. We have supplied 5 million doses of Covishield to the UK on its request. Therefore, nonrecogni­tion of Covishield is a discrimina­tory policy and impacts those citizens travelling to the UK,” Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said on Tuesday.

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, too, took up the matter with his UK counterpar­t, Liz Truss, in a meeting in New York and urged for an early resolution in mutual interest.

Last Friday, the UK introduced a new system for internatio­nal travel, removing the home isolation requiremen­t for vaccinated individual­s from certain countries. The benefit has been extended to an extra 17 countries, including those in Asia and the Caribbean. India, however, has not been included in the list, and passengers from here (even those with two doses of Covishield) would have to self-isolate for 10 days upon arrival in the UK.

This sparked an outcry, forcing the government to raise the issue with the UK government.

India has recognised four Covid vaccines but has used only the Oxford-astrazenec­alicensed Covishield and Bharat Biotech’s Covaxin in its immunisati­on drive. While Covishield has been recognised by the World Health Organizati­on, Covaxin’s approval is pending. Over 85 per cent of Indians have been vaccinated by Covishield.

The Indian government has been discussing the issue of vaccine recognitio­n with the UK and the European Union for the past few months. Several European countries began recognisin­g Covishield vaccine after India threatened retaliator­y action.

“We have offered some of our partner countries the option of mutual recognitio­n of vaccine certificat­es. These are reciprocal measures. We will see how it goes but if we don’t get satisfacti­on, we will be within our right to impose reciprocal measures,” Shringla stated.

The British High Commission said in a statement: “The UK is committed to opening up internatio­nal travel again as soon as is practicabl­e and this announceme­nt is a further step to enable people to travel more freely again, in a safe and sustainabl­e way, while protecting public health. We are engaging with the Government of India to explore how we could expand UK recognitio­n of vaccine certificat­ion to people vaccinated by a relevant public health body in India.”

According to the current norms, the UK accepts visa applicatio­ns for all categories in India and does not require vaccinatio­n for entry. Passengers, however, are required to take a pre-departure Covid-19 test, and tests on second and eighth day upon arrival, apart from self-isolation. Passengers can also shorten their home quarantine to around five days under its ‘test to release’ scheme.

India on its part does not insist on vaccinatio­n and has done away with institutio­nal quarantine for foreigners entering the country. A pre-arrival RT-PCR is required for all, and a post-arrival test is required for passengers from certain countries.

 ?? PHOTO: TWITTER ?? External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar took up the matter with his UK counterpar­t Liz Truss (left) in a meeting in New York
PHOTO: TWITTER External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar took up the matter with his UK counterpar­t Liz Truss (left) in a meeting in New York

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India