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SC says No individual can be forced to undergo COVID Vaccination, norms not arbitrary
New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday said that no individual can be forced to get vaccinated and added that the current Covid-19 vaccine policy of the government is not arbitrary.
A bench comprising Justices L. Nageswara Rao and B.R. Gavai said that restrictions imposed on the unvaccinated people by different organisations, institutions, and governments is not proportional. The bench suggested till numbers are low, state governments must remove such restrictions.
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The top court further directed the Centre to make public the data on adverse events of Covid-19 vaccination.
The top court noted that the governments did not bring on record any data to establish that unvaccinated people spread the virus more than vaccinated people, and also people who have not been vaccinated should not be barred from accessing public places. The detailed judgment will be uploaded later.
The top court's judgment came on a petition filed by Jacob Puliyel, a former member of the National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation, seeking the data of clinical trials and adverse effects of Covid vaccines and also challenging the vaccine mandates issued by some state governments. Puliyel was represented by advocate Prashant Bhushan.
During the hearing, the Centre had told the top court that as on March 13, over 180 crore doses of Covid-19 vaccines have been administered, and "adverse incidents", which were periodically recorded, were 77,314 as on March 12, which is 0.004 percent of the total vaccination. The Centre emphasized that segregated clinical data cannot be demanded by anyone under the garb of filing of public interest litigation
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta and Additional Solicitor General Aishwarya Bhati made submissions on behalf of the Centre.
Bharat Biotech International Ltd, represented by advocate Vipin Nair, had told the Supreme Court that Covaxin has undergone all necessary clinical trials and the phase 3 efficacy trials revealed it is 77.8 percent effective against Covid. The vaccine manufacturer said it has extensively published the findings of clinical trials in publicly available reputed peer-reviewed journals and on its website.
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