Travel Blog

Denmark abolishes all Corona measures

Danish parliament recently decided in Copenhagen that all Corona measures should be ended from October 1. There will therefore no longer be a mask requirement and the test regime will be abolished. The Danes will then no longer have to provide evidence of whether they are vaccinated or unvaccinated, or whether they have tested positive or negative.

The kingdom of under 6M people has become one of the most efficient vaccination distributors in Europe and aims to have offered its whole population a jab. So, they have come to the decision to abolish all restrictions after the nation vaccinated 74.3% of adults with an average of 540 new cases recorded each day, according to Reuters.

All Corona measures are being lifted in view of the increasing incidence figures in Denmark, reported RT Deutsch. Since the beginning of July, this value has risen from 31 to 107,2 (as of August 8). At the same time, the upper limits of this Corona indicator have increased significantly.

At the same time, the incidence limits are increased significantly: In communities from 300 to 500 infected people within seven days, in the districts from 500 to 1000. However, the prerequisite is that an increasing number of Covid-19 patients does not overload the health care system.

Denmark’s SSI infectious diseases agency said it no longer relied on vaccination to achieve herd immunity in the country. Tyra Grove Krause, the SSI’s acting academic director, said a new wave of infections were expected after people return to work and school at the end of this summer, but it should not be cause for alarm. “It will be more reminiscent of the flu,” Krause said.

denmark easing lockdown
Denmark is the first nation in the EU to abolish all COVID-19 restrictions with vaccine passports no longer needed.

Overall, the current vaccination rate is just under 58,4 percent of fully vaccinated people in Denmark. In Germany, this value is only slightly lower at 54,5 percent (as of August 8) but vaccine advocates have been persistent in their fear-mongering and pressure on the unvaccinated.

Tyrolean lawyer Dr. Renate Holzeisen, meanwhile strongly recommended that all employers refrain from vaccination pressure or compulsory vaccination, because most of them were “obviously not even aware of the far-reaching legal consequences associated with it”.

The fact that the so-called Covid-19 vaccines, according to the official approval documents of the EMA and the European Commission were not developed and approved for the prevention of infection with the SARS-COV-2 virus, but solely to prevent a more severe course of the disease, were conditionally approved for this reason alone, Holzeisen underscored.

corona-denmark
Denmark's Covid Vaccination Program Takes the Lead in EU

The official approval documents, therefore, show that these substances cannot interrupt the chain of infection because the people treated with them can become infected and thus be infectious. Practice also proves that people who are completely “vaccinated” become infected with the virus and even have the same viral load as “unvaccinated people” as the CDC, among others, has admitted. It is therefore clear that any Covid-19 “compulsory vaccination” actually lacks any justification.

All pressure, including moral pressure (the alleged act of solidarity with one’s neighbor), is therefore illegal in terms of criminal and liability law based on the official approval documents.

“As a lawyer advising on corporate law, I strongly recommend that every employer stay away from Covid-19 vaccination pressure or compulsory vaccination because most of them are obviously not even aware of the far-reaching legal consequences associated with it,” she said. 

covid-pass-denmark
Denmark issued a Digital COVID-19 Travel Passport

Entry to Denmark


You can travel to Denmark if you’re within the EU and Schengen Area or if you’re travelling from a ‘green listed’ or ‘yellow listed’ country. Australia is currently listed as a yellow country.

If you’re arriving from a high-risk zone within the EU or Schengen Area, you must take a COVID-19 (PCR or antigen) test prior to entering Denmark. PCR tests must be taken no more than 72 hours prior to entering Denmark and antigen tests must be taken no more than 48 hours prior to entering Denmark. You must also be tested on arrival in Denmark and undertake a period of self-isolation or quarantine. You may be exempt from these requirements if you carry proof of full vaccination or previous infection. Denmark is accepting certificates issued by other EU member states under the EU Digital Certificate Scheme.

If you’re in a ‘yellow listed’ country outside the EU or Schengen Area, you can’t travel to Denmark unless you’re able to provide proof that you’ve received the final dose of an EU-approved COVID-19 vaccine in the 14 days prior to arrival, are able to provide proof of previous infection or can present a negative COVID-19 test result upon entry. Check with local authorities on whether they will accept your supporting documentation. You can also travel to Denmark if you’re in an ‘orange listed’ or ‘red listed’ country outside the EU or Schengen Area and are travelling for specific purposes, but you must take a COVID-19 test before departure and you’ll be subject to testing, self-isolation and quarantine requirements.

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