Vatican to require vaccination proof or negative COVID-19 test

A woman shows her Green Pass, signifying vaccination against COVID-19 or a negative test taken within 48 hours, before entering the Vatican Museums at the Vatican in this Aug. 6, 2021, file photo. Beginning Oct. 1 the Vatican will require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID test from most people wanting to enter Vatican territory or offices. People attending Vatican liturgies are exempt from the requirements. (CNS photo/Guglielmo Mangiapane, Reuters)

VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Visitors, tourists and employees who want to enter Vatican territory will be required beginning on October 1 to show proof of vaccination, recovery from the coronavirus or a negative Covid-19 test.

The anti-Covid ordinance, which was approved by Pope Francis and signed by Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello, president of the commission in charge of Vatican City State, was released by the Vatican press office on September 20.

The only exemption in the order is for people entering Vatican territory for the sole purpose of attending a liturgical celebration; in that case, they will have access only “for the time strictly necessary” for the liturgy, and if they follow the health measures already in force: mandatory masking, temperature checks and social distancing.

The ordinance did not specify whether the Pope’s weekly general audiences on Wednesdays or his midday recitation of the Angelus on Sundays would be treated like a liturgy or like entrance to the Vatican Museums, which has been requiring proof of vaccination for admittance since early August. Even with the vaccination proof, visitors undergo a temperature check before admittance, and are required to keep a mask over their nose and mouth throughout the visit.

The Vatican police, known as the gendarme, will be charged with checking the documentation.

The ordinance specified that it applies to all Vatican “citizens, residents of the state, personnel in service at any level in the governorate of Vatican City State and in the various organisms of the Roman Curia and the institutions tied to it, to all visitors and beneficiaries of services”.

Italy requires foreign visitors to have vaccination proof and a negative Covid-19 test to enter the country. The vaccination pass or a negative test are required to enter restaurants, museums, gyms, indoor pools, cinemas, theatres and to visit patients in a hospital or nursing home. Beginning on October 15, Italy also will require the pass to fly or take long-distance trains or buses and to enter workplaces.

Photo: A woman shows her Green Pass, signifying vaccination against Covid-19 or a negative test taken within 48 hours, before entering the Vatican Museums last month (CNS Photo)

 

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