Israel understands need for Covid-19 vaccine passports. What about Hong Kong? Country’s top diplomat in city optimistic policy will revive travel amid pandemic
- Israeli consul general Amir Lati also voices concern among city’s Jewish community that strict quarantine rules will hurt business and push people to leave
- Key priorities for Middle Eastern nation include strengthening exchange of technology with Hong Kong, especially in Greater Bay Area

Adopting vaccine passports will help countries reopen their borders during the Covid-19 pandemic and encourage citizens to receive their jabs, Israel’s top diplomat in Hong Kong has told the Post.
In his first interview since arriving in the financial hub in September, Israeli Consul General Amir Lati said he believed nations would begin using the documents proving a person was vaccinated as they sought to restore travel with each other.
“It is important to have it to ensure the fast opening up,” he said.
Hong Kong is considering its own version of a vaccine passport, which would bar residents from numerous venues, but Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor said this week that the city was not at the stage of needing them.
In Israel, people well understood the importance of having such documents as a tool to protect the community, Lati said.