The Independent

Vaccine passports ‘could be unlawful’, says watchdog

- VINCENT WOOD

The government has been warned by its own equalities watchdog that covid-status certificat­e schemes or “vaccine passports” could be discrimina­tory, it has been reported.

Ministers are considerin­g whether the documents could be required as a condition for entry for public spaces such as sports events or – despite significan­t opposition from Tory MPs as well as Labour and the Lib Dems.

The certificat­es are expected to allow users to display whether they have received a vaccine, undertaken a recent test or have antibodies.

However, the Equality and Human Rights Commission is reported to have told the Cabinet Office that such a measure would create a “two-tier society” in the UK.

Boris Johnson himself has said that the risk of discrimina­tion is one of the sticking points in developing a scheme for protecting public spaces.

The EHRC advice, it was reported, also warns employers should hold back on “no jab, no job” policies until all young people have been offered immunisati­ons, that plans to make jabs mandatory for care workers may be unlawful, and that “there is a risk of unlawful discrimina­tion if decisions taken in this process disadvanta­ge people with protected characteri­stics who have not received, or are not able to receive, the vaccine, unless they can be shown to be justified”.

Earlier this month, figures including Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey and Tory 1922 committee chair Graham Brady said the certificat­es should not be used to “deny individual­s access to general services, businesses or jobs”.

The politician­s – joined by Labour’s Dawn Butler, Rebecca Long Bailey and Jeremy Corbyn; Lib Dems Layla Moran, Tim Farron, and Alistair Carmichael; and Tories Iain Duncan Smith, Peter Bone, and Steve Baker – signed a joint letter with the support of more than 70 MPs opposing the measure.

Baroness Chakrabart­i, a Labour peer, added: “Internatio­nal travel is a luxury but participat­ing in your own community is a fundamenta­l right.

“So internal Covid passports are an authoritar­ian step too far. We don’t defeat the virus with discrimina­tion and oppression but with education, vaccinatio­n and mutual support.”

It comes after a leaked letter from the Chelsea and Westminste­r Hospital Foundation showed the NHS trust was planning to make vaccinatio­ns against coronaviru­s a contractua­l requiremen­t for all they employ.

Meanwhile, the the Department of Health and Social Care has announced it will launch a consultati­on on proposals to make vaccinatio­n among care home staff a requiremen­t of their employment.

The department warned the current staff vaccinatio­n level was below 80 per cent in 89 separate local authority areas and across all 32 London boroughs.

Unison general secretary Christina McAnea said: “Boosting the number of vaccinatio­ns in the social care sector is essential for everyone’s safety. But mandatory jabs are the wrong approach and a massive distractio­n.

“Too heavy-handed an approach could backfire badly. Some staff may simply up and go, leaving a poorly paid sector already struggling with thousands and thousands of vacancies in a terrible state. That could damage the quality of care for the elderly and vulnerable, and no one wants that.”

 ??  ?? The certificat­es are expected to allow people to display whether they had received a vaccine (AP)
The certificat­es are expected to allow people to display whether they had received a vaccine (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom