Denmark, Sweden to issue digital vaccine ‘passports’
Sweden on
Thursday announced it would start the development of digital vaccine
certificates, to be used for travel and potentially more, following a similar
move by Denmark a day earlier.
The two
Nordic countries both said the certificates would be designed to enable
citizens to travel aboard, but also hinted they could potentially be used to
check whether someone was vaccinated if they were attending something
like a sports or cultural event.
“With a
digital vaccine certificate it will be quick and easy to prove a completed
vaccination,” Sweden’s minister for digital development Anders Ygeman said
in a statement.
The Swedish
government said they hoped to have the infrastructure to issue digital
certificates in place by June.
Denmark,
which announced their programme a day earlier, said they would initially
publish a registry online that could be accessed to check someone’s vaccination
status, which it hopes to have in place in late February, while it develops a
long-term technical solution.
While the
Danish government said it would hold off a final decision on whether the
“corona passports” could be used for more than just travel purposes – pending
more research into whether vaccinated people could still transmit the virus –
the aim is that it will “contribute to a gradual, sound and appropriate
reopening of Denmark.”
“It is
absolutely crucial, for us to be able to restart Danish society, that companies
can get back on track,” acting finance minister Morten Bodskov said in a
statement.
Both countries
also said that efforts would be made to make the national certificates
compatible with international certificates being discussed at the World
Health Organization (WHO) and at the EU level.
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The WHO has
floated the idea of digital certificates for the vaccine in the past—but in
January said that at the moment they oppose them being used as a requirement
for travel.
European
Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen in January backed the idea of using
certificates to identify people who have had the jab, but added that “whether
that gives a priority or access to certain goods, this is a political and legal
decision that has to be discussed on the European level.”
Christian
Wigand, a spokesman for the Commission, on Thursday reiterated to reporters
that the issue had been “discussed at the last European Council meeting between
the heads of state and government and it was concluded that the work on a
standardised, interoperable form of proof of vaccination for medical purposes
should continue”.
Asked about
whether countries could move forward individually, Wigand simply said that “we
have always been pushing for more coordination, we will continue to do so,
especially when it comes to travel and travel restrictions.”
(AFP)
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