Here are some of the more puzzling rules as Europeans settle for another winter holiday season overshadowed by the pandemic threat
Customers enjoy drinks outside a pub in Covent Garden on the last Saturday for shopping before Christmas, in central London on December 18, 2021. - The British government on Friday reported 93,045 new coronavirus cases, a third consecutive record daily tally, as the Omicron variant fuels a surge in infections across the country. Britain is currently rolling out a mass booster drive in order to vaccinate as many people as possible before the end of the year. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP via Getty Images)
Efforts in Europe to encourage vaccine use through certificates proving vaccination, a negative test result or evidence of having had Covid have created a mountain of regulation.
Here are some of the more puzzling rules as Europeans settle for another winter holiday season overshadowed by the pandemic threat:
Vaccine passes have become compulsory for a variety of public events across Europe. In the Czech Republic, the regulation has been extended to pig slaughters—a pre-Christmas tradition in which a butcher comes to people's homes to provide meat for holiday season delicacies.
The regulation states that vaccine passes are now required to participate in these "pig slaughter parties" and up to 1,000 people can attend the events, which usually have only a few family members present.
In England, vaccine passes are now required in nightclubs and pubs with dance floors or "space for dancing".