WHO Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge speaks during a news conference about COVID-19 at Eigtveds Pakhus in Copenhagen, Denmark, 27 March 2020; Credit: Ida Guldbaek Arentsen / Ritzau Scanpix / via Reuters

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Mandatory vaccinations against the coronavirus are an "absolute last resort", the World Health Organisation's top Europe official said on Tuesday 7 December 2021.

More and more countries in Europe, including Germany, are debating whether to make COVID-19 vaccines mandatory after Austria announced in November it would make inoculations compulsory as of 1 February next year, prompting large protests.

"Mandates around vaccination are an absolute last resort and only applicable when all feasible options to improve vaccination uptake have been exhausted", WHO Europe director Hans Kluge told reporters.

"The effectiveness of mandates is very context specific", Mr Kluge said, adding that public confidence and trust in authorities needed to be considered.

"What is acceptable in one society and community may not be effective and acceptable in another".

Indonesia, Micronesia and Turkmenistan have also made vaccinations against coronavirus mandatory for all adults.

(Reporting by Nikolaj Skydsgaard and Stine Jacobsen; Editing by Alex Richardson and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)