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China launches COVID-19 passport

China launches COVID-19 passport

People line up to get their nucleic acid test at a mass COVID-19 testing site in Beijing, China, Jan 22, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Thomas Peter)

BEIJING: China has launched a health certificate programme for domestic travellers, leading the world in plans for so-called virus passports.

The digital certificate, which shows a user's vaccination status and virus test results, is available for Chinese citizens via a programme on Chinese social media platform WeChat that was launched on Monday.

The certificate is being rolled out "to help promote world economic recovery and facilitate cross-border travel," a foreign ministry spokesman said.

READ: China reports 8 new COVID-19 cases

READ: China says it's ready to provide vaccines to overseas Chinese, Olympians

However the international health certificate is currently only available for use by Chinese citizens and it is not yet mandatory.

The certificate, which is also available in paper form, is thought to be the world's first known "virus passport".

The United States and Britain are among countries currently considering implementing similar permits.

The European Union is also working on a vaccine "green pass" that would allow citizens to travel between member countries and abroad.

China's programme includes an encrypted QR code that allows each country to obtain a travellers' health information, state media agency Xinhua reported Monday.

READ: Chinese urgency on COVID-19 goes missing in vaccination drive

READ: Vaccine nationalism puts world on brink of 'catastrophic moral failure' - WHO chief

"QR health codes" within WeChat and other Chinese smartphone apps are already required to gain entry to domestic transport and many public spaces in China.

The apps track a user's location and produce a "green" code - synonymous with good health - if a user has not been in close contact with a confirmed case or has not travelled to a virus hotspot.

But the system has sparked privacy concerns and fears it marks an expansion of government surveillance.

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Source: AFP/ic

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