Explainer | How the world is getting tough on unvaccinated people: Singapore gives them the bill, New Zealand says ‘no jab, no job’ and the US says ‘please’
- Despite the UK’s high Covid-19 vaccination rate, the country is experiencing a rise in infections described by some as a ‘pandemic of the unvaccinated’
- Singapore, New Zealand and Malaysia are among countries with uncompromising ideas for how to make vaccine refuseniks have a rethink

It has been nearly a year since the first jabs against Covid-19 were carried out in Europe, yet in much of the continent infections and deaths are on the rise.
The World Health Organization warns that Europe is once again the epicentre of the pandemic, accounting for half or more of all infections and deaths globally.
Cases across the continent have risen more than 50 per cent in recent weeks, it says, despite an “ample supply of vaccines”.
Experts say there are three main reasons for this:
Vaccine effectiveness waning
One is simply that the effectiveness of the vaccines may dwindle over time.
“The main question is how long the immunologic protection against SARS-CoV-2, which causes Covid-19, lasts,” said Albert Shaw, an infectious disease specialist at Yale University. “And since we are learning about Covid-19 in real time, this is hard to know.”