The digital vaccination certificate has become a hot “commodity” in Malaysia, as the fully vaccinated are allowed greater liberties and social perks.

As doors remain shut to the unvaccinated, some unscrupulous individuals have made attempts to lie about their vaccination status with fraudulent certificates.

Private clinics and general practitioners say they have been getting inquiries from those who are unvaccinated, with some offering up to 1,000 ringgit ($240), to fake their vaccination status.

Federation of Private Medical Practitioners Associations Malaysia president Dr Steven Chow said members reported getting phone calls asking them to falsify vaccine certificates with offers of up to 1,000 ringgit per certificate.

“They are not necessarily anti-vaxxers. They may be people who need to travel urgently,” Dr Chow said. “But the cost of the actual unsubsidised self-paying vaccination in a private clinic is 350 ringgit and to offer 1,000 ringgit for a fake document is suspicious. The authority should investigate and act early.”

Any document, said Dr Chow, or a certificate signed by a registered medical practitioner has a serious legal responsibility attached. “Our advice to doctors is never be a party. The best is to turn them away on the spot … Everyone should go for proper vaccination via the proper channel to protect themselves,” he said.

Recently, the police have also started investigations into the alleged sale of fake digital vaccination certificates, which was highlighted on social media.

“Yes we have had our share of people who only want the vaccination certificates,” said Malaysia Medical Practitioners Coalition Association president Dr Raj Kumar Maharajah.

To prevent legitimate certificates from being forged or stolen, he told people not to share pictures of their certificate on social media. He also advised staff members at premises to scan the code on the certificate to verify its authenticity.

General practitioner Dr Arisman Wenge Abdul Rahman said some of his medical colleagues had been approached to falsify people’s vaccination status.

“These individuals approach the doctors and boast that they are willing to pay to get the certificates without getting the jabs. They will come and whisper to the medical personnel at the vaccination centres and ask them to pretend to administer the vaccine,” he said, adding that he had not heard of any staff member taking up such an offer to date.

Dr Arisman stressed that the government’s allowance of certain activities for those fully vaccinated was not a form of discrimination.

“The aim is to reduce the risk of transmission among those who have yet to receive their vaccinations. Moreover, we hope allowing more freedom for the fully vaccinated will encourage those who are hesitant to receive the vaccine. We want everyone in Malaysia to be protected,” he said.

Dr Khairul Hafidz Alkhair Khairul Amin, the handler of Twitter account MedTweetMY, said falsifying one’s vaccination status was an unethical action.

“If people do not want to receive the vaccine, that is their right, but they must understand that it is the right of others to be protected,” he said. “If there are unvaccinated people who are carriers of the virus and they go to premises to dine in, they risk spreading the virus to others who are there.”

Federal police CID director Commissioner Abdul Jalil Hassan warned the public against getting involved in any activity connected to forging digital vaccination certificates because it is a serious offence.

This offence is punishable with a maximum seven-year jail term and 100,000 ringgit fine.

THE STAR (MALAYSIA)/ASIA NEWS NETWORK