Rejected petition Banned COVID Vaccine passport in Wales.

After Freedom day in Wales on August 7th.
With nearly all COVID restrictions ending

The Government needs to ban COVID Vaccine passports for pubs, restaurants, nightclubs, cinemas and big events because not only will cause human rights problems for adults/children who choose not to get vaccinated (not including anti-vaxxers) making it in to 2 tier society and privacy issues including cyber crimes and also hate crimes.

COVID passports are dangerous and pointless for many reasons.

More details

Example: If there's big music events in Wales requires COVID Pass, after people giving proof fully vaccinated or taken negative test. Then cyber security attack happen, with all of people's health information been stolen and sold to the drak web, also this be use in hate crimes in hands of wrong people who take advantage at someone with medical condition or disability.

This is even bad idea to the world even to point where some States in America including Texas, Florida, Utah and Alabama banning the COVID Pass because they don't went people's health privates and rights at risk.

One part why I said COVID Pass is pointless because there will be other medical treatments on the way including the COVID antiviral pill in development from companies like Pfizer and UK task force.

So I want the government to be clear to banned on COVID Passports before is to late.
No more COVID rules and no more fear. We don't to be in 2 tier society with rights and privately issues.

Why was this petition rejected?

There’s already a petition about this issue. We cannot accept a new petition when we already have one about a very similar issue, or if the Petitions Committee has considered one in the last year.

Another similar petition is already collecting signatures:
https://petitions.senedd.wales/petitions/244705

You are more likely to get action on this issue if you sign and share a single petition.

We only reject petitions that don’t meet the petition standards

Rejected petitions are published in the language in which they were submitted