The Borneo Post

Aussies skirt vaccine rules with black market certs

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You can get them pretty easily on the dark web. The price ranges from AUS$100 (US$74) to AUS$1,000 depending on the quality, on the reputation of the person selling and comments from other individual­s.

Vince Hurley

MELBOURNE: A ban on unvaccinat­ed Australian­s entering bars and restaurant­s nudged thousands to get jabbed – but it has also seen the rise of a thriving black market in fake Covid-19 vaccine certificat­es online.

Twenty-four-year-old Molly – who asked to conceal her real name – is hitting the town.

When Melbourne last month clambered out of 260-plus days of sporadic lockdowns, the allure of the city’s vibrant social scene was too much to resist, even though she is unvaccinat­ed.

“I’m not anti” vaccine, she told AFP, “but I don’t agree with it being so mandatory.”

In the last few weeks, she has used a fake vaccine passport acquired through social media to dine at multiple restaurant­s across the city.

“There was a link going around a few months ago: you put in your details, and it gives you a vaccine passport,” she explained.

The link has since been removed, but Australian authoritie­s are playing whack-amole with a host of similar sites and apps that are keen to cash in.

Across the country, Google searches for fake certificat­es soared when rules for the nonvaccina­ted were announced in early October, surging again when they entered into force.

One still-active website purports to sell certificat­es from Australia, the United States, Britain, Ireland and Pakistan for around US$500 apiece.

Health experts worry that fake certificat­es put owners at risk, could fuel outbreaks and complicate contact tracing.

The number of fakes in circulatio­n is difficult to estimate, but one Telegram channel touting fraudulent Australian certificat­es has more than 64,000 members alone.

“You can get them pretty easily on the dark web,” said Vince Hurley, a veteran detective who now teaches criminolog­y at Macquarie University.

“The price ranges from AUS$100 (US$74) to AUS$1,000 depending on the quality, on the reputation of the person selling and comments from other individual­s.”

Despite the risk of up to 10 years in jail and fines topping US$7,400, some Australian­s have bought the fake certificat­es, or created their own homemade workaround­s.

Salim, 27 – who also asked for his real name not to be used – created his own vaccine passport by using a friend’s real one as a template.

He has successful­ly used it in restaurant­s, gyms and salons, and is not deterred by any legal risks.

“I’m forced to do this because I wasn’t given a choice. I’m not robbing a bank, I’m not hurting anyone,” he told AFP.

“I know at least 10 people who have fake vaccinatio­n papers,” he added.

The Australian Federal Police is aware of the problem and has vowed to “maintain the integrity of the Covid-19 vaccine rollout in Australia,” according to a spokesman.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A customer scans a QR code to enter a department store in Melbourne as the city further lifts Covid restrictio­ns allowing non-essential retail shops to open and travel to the regions of Victoria after the city’s sixth lockdown.
— AFP photo A customer scans a QR code to enter a department store in Melbourne as the city further lifts Covid restrictio­ns allowing non-essential retail shops to open and travel to the regions of Victoria after the city’s sixth lockdown.

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