UN using honor system to check vaccinations for big meeting
UNITED NATIONS (AP) â" The U.N. General Assembly is relying on an honor system â" and only an honor system â" to ensure that world leaders have been vaccinated before they speak at next weekâs big meeting, the assembly president said.
Presidents, premiers, monarchs and other dignitaries wonât have to show vaccination cards or other proof of inoculation â" theyâll simply attest to it by swiping their ID badges at the assembly hall, G.A. President Abdulla Shahid said in a letter Thursday. The assembly began testing the same policy in June for diplomats at its day-to-day meetings.
Still, it could quickly raise thorny questions at the biggest global diplomatic gathering of the year. Russia has criticized the requirement, and the first speaker, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, isn't vaccinated and reiterated Thursday that he doesnât plan to get the shot anytime soon.
The U.N. has been wrestling with how to implement â" diplomatically â" a New York City vaccination requirement for convention centers, which the city said last week would apply to the assembly hall. Shahid told members Tuesday he supported the policy but didnât give details on how it would work.
âWe very much hope that this solution is acceptable to all, within the confines of everyoneâs responsibilities and status,â U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said Friday.
A message sent to New York Mayor Bill de Blasioâs office wasnât immediately returned. He has said the cityâs aim is to protect both assembly attendees and New Yorkers from the virus.
The coronavirus pandemic forced the assemblyâs top-level annual meeting to go almost entirely virtual last year.
Leaders seem to have missed the opportunity to interact face to face: More than 100 heads of state and government and over 20 foreign ministers have signed up to speak in person this time. Other nations are participating virtually in the meetingâs central event, a speechfest where every country gets a chance to opine on global issues, spotlight domestic ones and use the world stage to court allies or assail foes.
By tradition, first up is Brazil, where the right-wing president has insisted he wonât get inoculated for the meeting.
âWhy take the vaccine? To have antibodies, isnât that right? My antibody levels are way up high,â Bolsonaro said in a live broadcast on social media Thursday night. âAfter everybody in Brazil is vaccinated, Iâll decide.â
About 36% of Brazilâs population is vaccinated, according to figures compiled by Our World in Data.
While many countriesâ leaders have disclosed their vaccination status, some havenât. Among them is Vietnamese President Nguyen Xuan Phuc, who also is planning to attend the assembly.
Russia complained earlier this week that requiring vaccinations would violate nationsâ rights to participate at the U.N. and would discriminate against, for example, people with medical reasons not to get the shots.
A message was sent Friday to Russiaâs U.N. mission about the honor-system plan.
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Associated Press journalists David Biller in Rio de Janeiro and Hau Dinh in Hanoi, Vietnam, contributed to this report.
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