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PNP chief Gen. Guillermo Eleazar, who earlier headed the government’s
implementation of travel requirements nationwide as chief of the Joint Task
Force COVID Shield, said police were bracing for fake vaccine cards, noting
how people had been able to fake RT-PCR tests in the past.
“If the results of RT-PCR tests can be faked, it’s not completely impossible for
illicit people to also use fake vaccination documents. We won’t let this
happen,” Eleazar said, referring to the reverse transcription-polymerase chain
reaction test to determine if a person has the coronavirus.
Eleazar said police would work closely with local government units (LGUs) in
enforcing latest guidelines for interzonal travel for fully vaccinated people.
“I am directing all police offices and units to be vigilant against those travelers
who might use fake documents to prove that they are fully vaccinated,”
Eleazar said, reminding travelers to continue observing minimum public health
standards.
The latest resolution of the Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) on Emerging
Infectious Diseases provides that a person is considered fully vaccinated if it
has been two weeks or more since having received the second dose of a
COVID-19 vaccine approved by the Food and Drug Administration or the
World Health Organization for emergency use.
In compliance with the new protocols of the IATF for domestic travel, the
Department of Health (DOH) said yesterday that LGUs should issue
vaccination cards that are “more legitimate.”
However, IATF Resolution No. 124-B showed they must have vaccination
cards to prove that they already received two doses of the COVID-19 jabs.
“On the issue of vaccination cards, we hope and we have given advice that
because of these protocols, our LGUs must improve and that they will be able
to issue a vaccination card which is more legit and can be used by people
when they do international travels,” she added.
Currently, however, there is no uniform design for the vaccination cards being
issued by LGUs to those who received their COVID-19 jabs.
Most LGUs in Metro Manila are issuing vaccination cards on cardboard with
QR codes and a space for ID pictures.
But other LGUs, especially in the provinces, are using bond paper with no
space for ID picture and reproduced by photocopying machines.
According to DOH Technical Advisory Group member Edsel Salvana, the old
protocols apply “if vaccination cannot be properly verified.”
“It’s not a policy issue but an implementation issue. For those with verifiable
vaccination cards, they should be allowed to benefit from vaccination,” said
Salvana, director of University of the Philippines-National Institutes of Health’s
Molecular Biology and Biotechnology.
Asked about the challenge of validating inoculation cards, he maintained this
would be similar to the issue of the RT-PCR tests.
Salvana said “we can’t not implement because we think people will try to
cheat the system because that is not fair to the ones who properly comply.”
The agency would still have to find out which LGU would agree to the new
IATF policy, according to Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat, who is
also an IATF member.
Some LGUs who host the country’s tourism hotspots would ask for “a little
time” as they want a majority of their population to receive their COVID-19
vaccines first before welcoming more tourists, Puyat told radio dzRH
yesterday.
“For now we are trying to get who will agree… Other LGUs still have a small
portion of their population vaccinated,” she said in a mix of English and
Filipino.
She revealed that Benjamin Magalong, mayor of the country’s summer capital
Baguio City, was open to implement the IATF resolution since 40 percent of
the city’s population have been immunized against COVID-19.
Currently, some tourism destinations like Baguio City and Boracay require
tourists to submit negative RT-PCR test results two days before arriving.
Residents of areas under general community quarantine and the most relaxed
modified GCQ can travel only to areas with the same quarantine status.