<p>Beijing's city government has dropped plans to allow only vaccinated people to enter crowded venues such as libraries, cinemas and gyms from Monday, following a strong online backlash to the measure announced earlier this week.</p>.<p>The mandatory requirement would have marked a rare move in China, where the central government insists on voluntary vaccination and has quickly overruled other attempts by front-line officials to issue compulsory vaccination directives.</p>.<p>Late on Thursday, a day after Beijing said it would introduce its vaccination requirement for anyone without a medical exemption, the state-backed Beijing Daily reported that the city government had ditched the plan.</p>.<p>Citing an unnamed city official, the newspaper said that Beijingers would be able to enter public venues so long as they had proof of a negative Covid test within 72 hours after a body temperature check.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/jaishankar-meets-wang-seeks-early-end-to-2-year-long-india-china-military-stand-off-1124542.html" target="_blank">Jaishankar meets Wang, seeks early end to 2-year-long India-China military stand-off</a></strong></p>.<p>Reacting on social media to Beijing's initial attempt to enforce a mandate, an unvaccinated Beijing lawyer said he felt his "rights as a citizen were impaired" and that he has asked the city's health authority for public disclosure of the internal decision-taking process.</p>.<p>"The rule was just ridiculous," an unvaccinated Beijing theatre goer, surnamed Zhang, told Reuters.</p>.<p>While the central government has not made vaccination mandatory, it has warned that the lower vaccination rate among the elderly was a weakness in China's Covid-19 response.</p>.<p>And, the government does require certain employees to be vaccinated before they can take on certain jobs.</p>.<p>Many local governments have doled out vaccination incentives like shopping coupons to less vaccinated groups, and also pressured officials to hit vaccination targets. </p>
<p>Beijing's city government has dropped plans to allow only vaccinated people to enter crowded venues such as libraries, cinemas and gyms from Monday, following a strong online backlash to the measure announced earlier this week.</p>.<p>The mandatory requirement would have marked a rare move in China, where the central government insists on voluntary vaccination and has quickly overruled other attempts by front-line officials to issue compulsory vaccination directives.</p>.<p>Late on Thursday, a day after Beijing said it would introduce its vaccination requirement for anyone without a medical exemption, the state-backed Beijing Daily reported that the city government had ditched the plan.</p>.<p>Citing an unnamed city official, the newspaper said that Beijingers would be able to enter public venues so long as they had proof of a negative Covid test within 72 hours after a body temperature check.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/jaishankar-meets-wang-seeks-early-end-to-2-year-long-india-china-military-stand-off-1124542.html" target="_blank">Jaishankar meets Wang, seeks early end to 2-year-long India-China military stand-off</a></strong></p>.<p>Reacting on social media to Beijing's initial attempt to enforce a mandate, an unvaccinated Beijing lawyer said he felt his "rights as a citizen were impaired" and that he has asked the city's health authority for public disclosure of the internal decision-taking process.</p>.<p>"The rule was just ridiculous," an unvaccinated Beijing theatre goer, surnamed Zhang, told Reuters.</p>.<p>While the central government has not made vaccination mandatory, it has warned that the lower vaccination rate among the elderly was a weakness in China's Covid-19 response.</p>.<p>And, the government does require certain employees to be vaccinated before they can take on certain jobs.</p>.<p>Many local governments have doled out vaccination incentives like shopping coupons to less vaccinated groups, and also pressured officials to hit vaccination targets. </p>