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The boss of Australian airline Qantas said “governments will insist” on vaccines for international travelers, reports the BBC.
Managing Director Alan Joyce said many governments spoke of vaccination as “a condition of entry” and said that even if they were not, he believed Qantas should apply its own policy and said that passengers would be ready to accept the change.
The World Health Organization, however, told the BBC: “We do not approve of the fact that a vaccination passport should be a requirement for travel.”
He said that regardless of what the private sector wanted, a unified approach from governments would be needed to make this change work.
The European Commission this week paved the way for the introduction of a digital green certificate providing proof that holders have been vaccinated, recovered from the coronavirus or recently tested negative.
The passes are meant to facilitate travel within and outside the bloc, balancing tourism-dependent states keen to reopen their borders and countries like France and Germany that have adopted a more cautious stance.
British Airways has called on the UK government to allow the use of digital medical passports to verify vaccination or negative test results. The carrier requested that vaccinated travelers be allowed to fly without restrictions, while unvaccinated passengers could be allowed to travel on planes with a negative Covid-19 test. – Additional reporting threads
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