Covid pass: Swansea cinema owner fails to show at court

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Image caption,

Cinema owner Anna Redfern has called the Covid pass law "a total infringement of our human rights"

A cinema owner has failed to show up for her court case after refusing to ask customers for Covid passes.

Anna Redfern did not turn up at Swansea Magistrates' Court earlier after the city council sought a court order to stop her reopening Cinema & Co.

District judge Neale Thomas asked the council for written submissions on why a closure notice was needed and adjourned the case until 30 November.

Ms Redfern has previously said she would not ask people for Covid passes.

Ms Redfern, who runs the 56-seat independent cinema, was served with a closure notice by the council on 18 November after allegedly failing to comply with several coronavirus regulations.

Prosecutor Lee Reynolds said the premises "seems to think this pandemic doesn't exist".

Image caption,

Covid passes for cinemas have been compulsory since 15 November

On the complaint for a civil order put before the court, the council asserted that Cinema & Co had not completed a Covid risk assessment, and had not informed staff of the measures required to prevent transmission of Covid.

Also, the council said the cinema had not implemented reasonable measures, including a Covid pass, and did not have adequate cleaning products or anti-viral products to reduce transmission of the virus.

Mr Reynolds told the court he was concerned about a significant delay in the case, due to the "state of the premises".

Covid passes have been a legal requirement for anyone over 18 in Wales for nightclubs and large-scale events since 11 October.

This was expanded to theatres, concert halls and cinemas on 15 November and means people must show a pass to prove they are either fully vaccinated or have had a negative lateral flow test result within the past 48 hours.

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Cinema & Co in Swansea remains open, despite the ongoing legal issues

Judge Thomas said he was concerned the council was bringing the closure notice under the Public Health (Control of Diseases) Act 1984 and not the Welsh government's coronavirus legislation.

He said the Welsh government "would have had the power to include enforcement powers, but they chose not to".

Mr Reynolds described the Coronavirus Act as "very limited" and said bringing the closure notice this way was necessary.

He told the judge Ms Redfern was "making various assertions in the press and posting comments online which are inflammatory and highly controversial".

Cinema & Co remained open on Thursday, after Ms Redfern failed to show up for her court case.

The NHS Covid pass is available digitally, but you need to register for an NHS login via the website.

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