“One of the criteria the European Commission might consider for travel recommendations is the vaccination rate of the domestic population. If it is so, we’ll have a problem and won’t do well,” Beroš told Emil Daus of the Istrian Democratic Party, who asked about plans for the summer tourist season.
Last year we were the champions of safety in the Mediterranean, but this summer the tourism situation might be bad and vaccination is the way out, Beroš said, adding that vaccines protect against serious illness and death also with the new variants.
Submitting a report on coronavirus protocols, he dismissed some MPs’ claims that COVID certificates were pointless given that the vaccinated are contagious, too.
“COVID certificates don’t represent absolute but optimal safety given what is being invested,” Beroš said, adding that the vaccinated are far less contagious than the unvaccinated.
He said no EU member state had abolished the certificates and was not jumping to conclusions.
“Great Britain has abolished them, but it’s not in the EU. Denmark is considering it but hasn’t abolished them. Some countries with high vaccination rates are considering changing the application of COVID certificates, but are not abolishing them,” the minister said, adding that the certificates are an instrument of the European Commission and that they enable travel.
As for the testing of children, Beroš said it was being introduced not only for health safety but to allow children to go to school. Testing is harmless and is being conducted in 16 European countries, he added.
Defending the justification of testing, the minister said that since it was introduced in the public sector, 1.6 million tests had been done and that 116,000 came back positive.
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