Brit couple with Indian-made AstraZeneca vaccine BARRED from boarding flight to Malta amid EU jab row

A BRITISH couple vaccinated with an Indian-made batch of AstraZeneca were barred from boarding a flight to Malta, it’s reported.

Steve and Glenda Hardy, 64 and 63, weren’t allowed on at Manchester Airport last Friday, The Telegraph reports.


Brit couple with Indian-made AstraZeneca vaccine BARRED from boarding flight to Malta amid EU jab row
Five million Brits have received the Covishield version of the AZ vaccine

They hadn’t seen their son for more than a year and it was their third attempt to visit him.

The couple, from Hull, were jabbed with the Indian-manufactured vaccine in March – but staff from travel operator Tui stopped them while boarding.

It comes as five million Brits faced possibly being blocked from holidays on the continent because the doses aren’t recognised by the EU.

Mrs Hardy said: “We were just gutted.

“We thought we’d covered ourselves – we paid for PCR tests, downloaded the NHS app and printed off the letter – but we fell at the final hurdle. I feel like we’re in limbo.

‘GUTTED’

“We haven’t seen our son since he moved there a year ago. We had our flights refunded by Tui, but that’s by-the-by.

“Our big fear is that we just don’t know when we’ll be able to go to Malta.”

The Indian-made AZ vaccines are identifiable by numbers – 4120Z001, 4120Z002, 4120Z003 – on recipients’ cards after they’re jabbed. 

The Hardys’ Covid vaccine numbers were checked by Tui and they couldn’t board the flight as Maltese authorities didn’t recognise the jab.


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Mr Hardy said: “When we took our vaccine – we had a vaccine – we were asked to take them.

“We took both doses. We didn’t know what we were getting.

“We trusted the Government on that. Boris Johnson said that there were no Indian vaccines issued in this country.

“That’s obviously a lie because it’s on our page.

“The problem is the fact that we can’t see our son. We jumped through the hoops… and then we were hit with this.

“It was just devastating… what the hell are we supposed to do?”

Earlier this month, the Prime Minister said there was no reason Brits should be banned from Europe because they’ve been jabbed with AstraZeneca doses made in India.

The shots aren’t yet authorised by the European Medicines Agency (EMA), which regulates vaccinations in the bloc.

It means the EU’s new vaccine passport scheme doesn’t recognise the version of the AZ jab, which is known as Covishield.

Some EU states, plus Iceland and Switzerland, said they would accept the jabs produced by the Serum Institute of India (SII).

Greece and Spain are among the countries that will welcome those who’ve had the jabs.

But Malta – one of the few countries on the UK’s green travel list – will not, the Telegraph reports.

Mrs Hardy said: “What’s being done about this? I think this is all going to get swept under the rug… and travel is going to open up to everyone but not to us.”

A Tui spokesman said Maltese authorities contacted them about the change of entry requirements and said “customers with bookings were contacted as soon as we became aware”.

The EU’s Digital Covid Certificate launched this month and will allow Europeans to travel freely across the continent without quarantine or rigorous testing on arrival. 

Anyone in the bloc who has been double jabbed will be able to cross borders simply by presenting digital proof they have been inoculated.


Brit couple with Indian-made AstraZeneca vaccine BARRED from boarding flight to Malta amid EU jab row
Spain is one of the countries that has said it will accept the jabs
Brit couple with Indian-made AstraZeneca vaccine BARRED from boarding flight to Malta amid EU jab row
Millions of Brits have received a version of the AstraZeneca jab which is not authorised by the European Medicines Agency (Stock image)




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