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The head of the Department of Emergency Situations (DSU), Secretary of State Raed Arafat, said that in Romania the authorities did not think about applying rules of discrimination and restriction to people who are not vaccinated, but it is possible that in some areas of the Outside where stricter anti-COVID restrictions apply, Romanian citizens must be vaccinated to travel there, Agerpres reports.
“It does not mean (n. Red vaccination) that you have returned to normal (…) There may be some international meetings that tell you ‘you can come if you are vaccinated’. It is possible, we will see. We hope that will happen. In Romania we said that we would not apply such discrimination and we will not apply such rules, but outside, especially in areas where it was now strictly forbidden for anyone to go, it only took place online, it is possible to say that you cannot come unless you are vaccinated, ”he said Saturday at night the person in charge of DSU, in a program of Antena 3.
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“It does not mean (n. Red vaccination) that you have returned to normal (…) There may be some international meetings that tell you ‘you can come if you are vaccinated’. It is possible, we will see. We hope that will happen. In Romania we said that we would not apply such discrimination and we will not apply such rules, but outside, especially in areas where it was now strictly forbidden for anyone to go, it only took place online, it is possible to say that you cannot come unless you are vaccinated, ”he said Saturday at night the person in charge of DSU, in a program of Antena 3.
Raed Arafat added that he hopes to get vaccinated and that the most important aspect of the COVID-19 vaccine is that even if a person contracts mild forms of coronavirus, they will not contract severe forms and sequelae to the lungs or other organs that remain for long periods or even forever.