PRAGUE (Reuters) – Hundreds of people blocked traffic in the centre of Slovak capital Bratislava, protesting against a law which gives those who have had the COVID-19 vaccine easier access to public events and spaces, Slovak media reported on Thursday.
The law, which requires people who haven’t been inoculated to take a test for such access, was approved by parliament on Sunday and signed by President Zuzana Caputova on Monday.
Slovakia joins a growing number of countries who also stipulate that a vaccine, or a negative test, will be needed for venues such as cinemas, restaurants and other closed spaces.
Small groups of protesters started arriving to a square in front of Caputova’s official residence in the morning, with their numbers rising throughout the day, the Dennik N daily reported.
The protest, while peaceful, has disrupted traffic in the whole city, but the police have not moved to disperse the crowd.
A similar protest took place last Friday outside parliament, where riot police fired teargas at people who blocked the entrance and pelted the building with eggs.
As of Thursday, 35.7% of the population was fully vaccinated, data from Johns Hopkins University showed. That is one of the lowest per capita rates in the European Union.
(Reporting by Robert Muller; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)