From the BBC:
“Covid passes set to stay as
Europe heads for winter”
(The Dutch Coronacheck app is not
checked everywhere, the BBC's Anna Holligan has found_
There have been protests and
complaints of restricted freedom, but much of Europe is now using Covid
passports to enter bars, restaurants, cinemas and museums. Italy also requires
a Covid pass to enter a workplace and Austria is about to follow suit. Although
England does not require a pass, from Friday, the UK's digital Covid pass will
be accepted across the European Union. Our correspondents around Europe have
been getting to grips with the rules.
Italy has adopted arguably
the most rigid Covid pass rules in Europe, writes Mark Lowen in Rome. The Green
Pass QR code - from at least one Covid vaccination, negative test or proof of
recovery - has to be shown for everything from indoor restaurants to cinemas,
gyms and intercity trains. It is also required by all employees in the public
and private sectors when they turn up for work. Passes are checked regularly
and my family, visiting from the UK, were amazed how rigidly Covid rules,
including masks, are respected here. In France it is surprising how
quickly the passe sanitaire has become part of daily life, writes Hugh
Schofield in Paris. Few think twice now before presenting their mobile phones
at bars, cinemas and museums, or on TGV trains and at airports. It is a ormalized
ritual.
Hugh with corona pass
(Hugh Schofield showing his pass
in France)
It's a different story in the Netherlands,
writes Anna Holligan. In all the beach bars, restaurants and city cafes I've
visited since the pass was introduced on 25 September, I have not once been
asked to flash my pass, although I have been asked at the cinema. The rules
state anyone aged 13 and over has to show a Covid entry pass, although not for
shops or taking part in sports events. Denmark actually phased out its
coronapas last month, writes Adrienne Murray in Copenhagen. It was first in
Europe to adopt a pass in April but has now downgraded Covid-19 to a no longer
"socially critical" disease. In Germany, if you go out to eat
or drink, it's good to know the latest Covid regulation lingo, writes Damien
McGuinness in Berlin. Handmade signs with a large 2G have popped up on the
doors of many restaurants, cafes and bars. 2G means only people who are either
geimpft (vaccinated) or genesen (recovered) can go in. No sign means the usual
3G rule applies, which includes negative tests too. Austrians have used
3G certificates for months, writes Bethany Bell in Vienna. A friend and I went
recently to one of my favourite restaurants in Vienna, which serves excellent
Wiener Schnitzel and apple strudel. "You have your Green Passes, I
suppose?" asked the waiter suspiciously. He glanced briefly at our digital
certificates, then handed over the menus. Some establishments check on the
passes very strictly, others don't even bother to ask. In Switzerland,
Covid passes are obligatory and the rules strictly applied, says Imogen Foulkes
in Bern. And now that Covid tests aren't free anymore, going out for a beer
gets pretty expensive. The vaccination rate is stagnating at around 62% and the
government wants more people to get the jab.
Anna Holligan: After some
early consternation, the majority of pragmatic Dutch accepted the pass as a
means of resurrecting their social lives while shrugging off social distancing.
When I've asked waiters or box-office workers if they want to see the QR code
proving my vaccination the answers vary from "no, it's okay, we trust
you" to "we don't actually have the technology". A recent study
by I&O Research found around a third of cafes and restaurants in the
Netherlands were not scanning the coronapasses. Adrienne Murray: Danes
are tech-savvy and accepted the app quickly as it offered a quick path out of
lockdown. But because the coronapas came in well before people were
double-vaccinated it required regular testing. Free test centres sprung up in
neighbourhoods all over Copenhagen and towns elsewhere. These have mostly
closed now that 75% of over-12s are fully vaccinated and a third booster is
being rolled out.
(Guy Delauney says lip-service is
often paid to the Covid passes in Balkan countries)
Guy Delauney, Balkans
correspondent: I've detected little enthusiasm for the passes, travelling
through Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia and North Macedonia. While one restaurant on
the main square in the Macedonian capital Skopje barred entry to people without
passes, another had no checks at all. Staff complain of abuse, so a sign or a
sticker on a table often acts as a fig leaf for official policies. Mark
Lowen: There's a stereotype of Italians as a nation not minded to follow
rules - but by being hit first in Europe, the pandemic seems to have changed
that, and Italy's "no-vax" movement is relatively small. There have
been some protests. Crowds stormed and smashed up a trade union building and
then anti-Green Pass workers staged sit-ins and protests in Trieste, blockading
the country's most important commercial port. Police broke them up with tear
gas and water cannon.
(Dockers in Trieste have been
among the most vocal protesters against having the Covid pass compulsory at
work)
Imogen Foulkes: Opponents
of the Swiss pass complain the strict policies undermine their constitutional
freedoms. There are demonstrations every week, some of which have turned
violent. Enough signatures have been gathered to call a referendum on 28
November to abolish the passes. If the Swiss do vote to get rid of them, it
could make travel in Europe problematic - as the Swiss pass is recognised
across Europe's passport-free Schengen area. Hugh Schofield: Of course
there are people in France who object on principle to having to prove their
credentials at every turn. Every Saturday there are demonstrations in Paris and
other cities, bringing together anti-vaxxers with libertarians and protesters
against "health discrimination". Contrary to what some expected,
though, these have not turned into a mass movement, and are dwindling in
strength. Anna Holligan: There have been a few challenges in the
Netherlands: one failed lawsuit argued the pass was discriminatory because it
treated unvaccinated people differently without good reason. Supermodel Doutzen
Kroes announced on Instagram that she would not be "forced to take the
shot" or "forced to prove my health to participate in society".
But opposition to the pass in the Netherlands appears to be more a matter of
principle than practicality. Bethany Bell: While many Austrians welcomed
the passes as a step towards more freedoms, the opposition far-right Freedom
Party has championed those who disagree with the measures. Its head, Herbert
Kickl, has accused the government of splitting society into "the good
vaccinated and the bad unvaccinated". Guy Delauney: There have been
protests in Slovenia's capital every Wednesday in recent weeks and some have
involved violent confrontations with the police, who have used teargas and
water cannon to clear the crowds.
(Slovenian protesters have
challenged restrictions regularly in the capital Ljubljana)
Serbian protesters have also been
making themselves heard in Belgrade in recent days - despite the fact that the
Covid pass there only applies to bars and restaurants after 22:00. One
epidemiologist described that approach as "trying to put out a fire with a
glass of water".
Adrienne Murray: Denmark's
coronapas was agreed across all parliamentary parties, even the opposition,
with the promise that it would only be used for a finite time. And it was. Some
public protests were held but they were attended by hundreds not thousands. Hugh
Schofield: The effect of the French passe sanitaire on levels of vaccination
seems incontrovertible. From the beginning of August vaccinations shot up.
Clearly many who were hesitating decided for the sake of a return to normal-ish
life, it was necessary to take the plunge. Today 50 million French people have
been totally vaccinated, including 88.4% of over-12s. And since mid-October a
second part of the national arm-twist has come into effect: the end of free
tests. The passe sanitaire has two options: either show proof of vaccination or
a recent negative test. With this second option now incurring a cost, there'll
be a further incentive for vaccination. Damien McGuinness: Germany has
also dropped free antigen tests under its 3G rule, so anyone eligible who
refuses the vaccine has to pay. Businesses can now choose for themselves
whether to allow unvaccinated customers inside and this 2G rule is seen as a way
of encouraging vaccination. It can be a selling point for customers. One Berlin
cafe-owner said he had only had one objection from a regular. "I just
replied that he had excluded himself by deciding to not get vaccinated,"
he told me.
(Covid rules are broadly followed
in Italy: Mark Lowen says his eight-year-old niece was expected to wear a mask
in cafes, shops and museums)
Mark Lowen: Nothing
motivates an Italian like threatening to bar them from their favourite
trattoria and when compulsory passes were announced there was a sudden spike in
vaccination appointments. Italy has some of the highest vaccination rates in
Europe, with around 82% having received both doses, but that rate has slowed
slightly and 40% of the workers at Trieste port still haven't been vaccinated,
while far-right parties have courted the anti-vax and anti-Green Pass movement.
Guy Delauney: Slovenia has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the
EU, and its efforts to implement a Covid pass system initially helped boost
take-up. That was until the constitutional court suspended a mandatory pass for
public sector workers. Shops and restaurants all display notices reminding
customers they need a valid PCT certificate, as it is known. But enforcement is
patchy and official inspectors are thin on the ground. Mark Lowen:
They'll certainly stay in Italy until the end of the year, but possibly in a
nod to the protest movement the deputy health minister has said they could be
"reassessed" next year if the data continues to show manageable
infection numbers, low hospitalisations, and rising vaccine rates. The
government says the alternative to compulsory passes is new restrictions, and
most Italians will do whatever they can to avoid another lockdown. Adrienne
Murray: The passes in Denmark may have gone but Covid is still here. Cases
have recently risen back above 1,000 a day and are expected to go up further.
However, there is little trace of the pandemic in everyday life, just the hand
gel at the entrance to the supermarket. There's no social distancing, it's rare
to see anyone in a face mask and guidance to work from home lifted in early
August. Bethany Bell: As of 1 November, Austrians will have to show 3G
passes to go to work. And this winter they will also have to show the
certificates if they want to go skiing. Passes will be checked when people buy
tickets for the ski lifts. And there are even stricter plans for après-ski,
where antigen tests will no longer be accepted - only a vaccination
certificate, proof of recovery or negative PCR test result will do. Hugh
Schofield: The initial hope was that the passe sanitaire could be phased
out in France from mid-November. That is not going to happen. The government is
warning that though the Covid situation is vastly improved from two months ago,
there are still risks of a winter resurgence. Last week a new health bill
passed its first reading in parliament, which would make possible an extension
of the passe until July 2022. Guy Delauney: Coronavirus case numbers
have been surging across the Western Balkans, so despite the poor response to
Covid passes, governments are likely to try again.
^ It seems the Covid Vaccine
Passport is not very well used around Europe (especially the European Union)
even where it is mandatory. ^
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