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Abu Dhabi to close public spaces to unvaccinated in jab incentive bid

Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates and home port for Etihad Airways, has announced that a wide range of public places will soon be accessible only to those vaccinated against the coronavirus in a bid to encourage more people to get jabbed.

Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates and home port for Etihad Airways, has announced that a wide range of public places will soon be accessible only to those vaccinated against the coronavirus in a bid to encourage more people to get jabbed.

On Monday, the Emirati government said that starting August 20, authorities will begin restricting access to shopping malls, restaurants, cafes, sporting activities, museums, gyms, schools, and universities.

The unvaccinated will effectively be barred from entering any business in the city except for supermarkets and pharmacies.

Abu Dhabi has already rolled out a “green pass” system that limits public access to those who have either received the shot or show a negative virus test.

It comes as the country increasingly bets its economic reopening on its speedy vaccination campaign. The government says at least 93% of Abu Dhabi’s population has received at least one dose of the vaccine.

KARRYON-Abu-Dhabi-Camels-Liwa-Desert
Abu Dhabi, Camels in the Liwa Desert

The neighbouring travel hub of Dubai, home to long-haul carrier Emirates, has also introduced some vaccination restrictions on mass entertainment and sporting events. However, malls and other businesses remain open to the unvaccinated.

The UAE boasts one of the world’s fastest inoculation campaigns, with 15.1 million doses administered to its population of some 9 million. The country has relied heavily on the Chinese state-backed Sinopharm shot.

Meanwhile, in Australia, there have been 7,374,666 doses administered in the national COVID-19 vaccination rollout up to Sunday, June 27, including 48,346 in the previous 24 hours.

The numbers add up to 4.8% of the Australian population fully vaccinated, with 19.3% having received only one dose and a rollout gap of 4.6 million people.

Via AAP