Public transport ban for anti-vaxxers in France

Public transport ban for anti-vaxxers: Passengers will need to prove they are not infected or had a jab under proposed French rules

  • Could need jab to ‘access transport or some locations, and certain activities’
  • According to opinion polls, 55 percent of French people say they will not get jab 
  • Opposition politicians have condemned the draft law, including Marine Le Pen 

People who fail to get a Covid-19 vaccination could be banned from using public transport in France, according to a draft law which has sparked angry protests from opposition politicians.

Prime Minister Jean Castex on Monday got his cabinet’s backing for a bill that is designed to provide a legal framework for dealing with health crises, including the coronavirus pandemic.

According to the text, which will now be submitted to parliament, a negative Covid test or proof of a ‘preventative treatment, including the administration of a vaccine’ could be required for people to be granted ‘access to transport or to some locations, as well as certain activities’.

People who fail to get a Covid-19 vaccination could be banned from using public transport in France (pictured is a testing facility in Le Bignon today

According to opinion polls, 55 percent of French people say they will not get a Covid shot, one of the highest rates in the European Union.

The government’s vaccination campaign is to start on Sunday.

President Emmanuel Macron has promised that coronavirus vaccinations, though strongly recommended, will not be mandatory.

But opposition politicians condemned the draft law, with Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right RN party, calling it an ‘essentially totalitarian’ measure.

‘In a backhanded way, this bill does not aim to make vaccinations mandatory, but will prevent anybody who doesn’t comply from having a social life,’ she said.

Freezers are pictured in a warehouse which will be used as a logistic hub for the COVID-19 vaccine distribution in Chanteloup-en-Brie. The government's vaccination campaign is to start on Sunday

Freezers are pictured in a warehouse which will be used as a logistic hub for the COVID-19 vaccine distribution in Chanteloup-en-Brie. The government’s vaccination campaign is to start on Sunday

RN party spokesman Sebastien Chenu said Macron’s government was planning ‘a health dictatorship’.

Guillaume Peltier, deputy leader of the centre-right LR party, said it was ‘inconceivable’ that the government should be allowed to ‘get all the power to suspend our freedoms without parliamentary control.’

Centrist senator Nathalie Goulet said the draft was ‘an attack on public freedoms’, while the far-left deputy Alexis Corbiere said ‘we could a least have a collective discussion if the idea is to limit our public liberties.’

But opposition politicians condemned the draft law, with Marine Le Pen, (pictured) leader of the far-right RN party, calling it an 'essentially totalitarian' measure

But opposition politicians condemned the draft law, with Marine Le Pen, (pictured) leader of the far-right RN party, calling it an ‘essentially totalitarian’ measure

In response, public sector minister Amelie de Montchalin said the bill was ‘not at all made to create exceptional powers for the government’ or ‘create a health state.’

She said there would be a debate about the bill during which ‘everything that needs clarification will be clarified.’

The EU gave the green light for a Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine on Monday, paving the way for the first inoculations to start across 27 countries just after Christmas.

Yesterday France recorded 5797 new cases of coronavirus and 351 further deaths.