Photo taken on May 13, 2021 shows an instruction card for using the "Ashyq" application in a restaurant in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, May 13, 2021. The Sanitary Epidemiological Control Committee of Kazakhstan has announced that Nur-Sultan Airport is set to launch a pilot project Ashyq to identify the COVID-19 status of passengers started from May 12. Passengers will have their QR codes scanned to identify a COVID-19 status based on the data from the Single integration site of PCR tests and the Health Ministry's COVID-19 Control Center before entering the airport in Nur-Sultan city. (Photo by Kalizhan Ospanov/Xinhua)
A woman scans the QR code to identify health status in a restaurant in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, May 13, 2021. The Sanitary Epidemiological Control Committee of Kazakhstan has announced that Nur-Sultan Airport is set to launch a pilot project Ashyq to identify the COVID-19 status of passengers started from May 12. Passengers will have their QR codes scanned to identify a COVID-19 status based on the data from the Single integration site of PCR tests and the Health Ministry's COVID-19 Control Center before entering the airport in Nur-Sultan city. (Photo by Kalizhan Ospanov/Xinhua)
People scan the QR code to identify health status in the airport in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, May 13, 2021. The Sanitary Epidemiological Control Committee of Kazakhstan has announced that Nur-Sultan Airport is set to launch a pilot project Ashyq to identify the COVID-19 status of passengers started from May 12. Passengers will have their QR codes scanned to identify a COVID-19 status based on the data from the Single integration site of PCR tests and the Health Ministry's COVID-19 Control Center before entering the airport in Nur-Sultan city. (Photo by Kalizhan Ospanov/Xinhua)
A woman scans the QR code to identify health status in a shopping center in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan, May 13, 2021. The Sanitary Epidemiological Control Committee of Kazakhstan has announced that Nur-Sultan Airport is set to launch a pilot project Ashyq to identify the COVID-19 status of passengers started from May 12. Passengers will have their QR codes scanned to identify a COVID-19 status based on the data from the Single integration site of PCR tests and the Health Ministry's COVID-19 Control Center before entering the airport in Nur-Sultan city. (Photo by Kalizhan Ospanov/Xinhua)