From Yahoo/AP:
“Moscow goes into lockdown, rest
of Russia braces for same”
(A view of an empty Red square,
with the St. Basil's Cathedral, center, and Kremlin's Spasskaya Tower, right,
in Moscow, Russia, Monday, March 30, 2020. )
The Russian capital, Moscow, on
Monday woke up to a lockdown obliging most of its 13 million residents to stay
home, and many other regions of the vast country quickly followed suit to stem
the spread of the new coronavirus. A stern-looking President Vladimir Putin
warned his envoys in Russia's far-flung regions that they will be personally
responsible for the availability of beds, ventilators and other key equipment. “We
have managed to win time and slow down an explosive spread of the disease in
the previous weeks, and we need to use that time reserve to the full,” Putin said.
Russia so far has been relatively spared by the outbreak, with 1,836 confirmed
cases and nine deaths, but the number of people testing positive has risen
quickly in recent days and authorities are bracing for the worst. Putin has
declared that only people employed by essential sectors should work this week,
leaving it to regional authorities to spell out the details. Moscow Mayor
Sergei Sobyanin followed up by ordering Muscovites to stay home starting Monday
except for medical emergencies and runs to nearby shops. He said the city will
issue special passes for those who need to keep working and track all others
with electronic surveillance. “We will steadily tighten controls,"
Sobyanin told a Cabinet meeting. “I hope that by the week's end we will have information
systems allowing us to fully control citizens' movements and prevent possible
violations.” On Tuesday, the Russian parliament is scheduled to approve a bill
that imposes prison terms of up to seven years and fines of up to 2 million
rubles (about $25,000) — a huge sum in a country where an average monthly
salary hovers around $500 — on violators of the lockdown. Moscow has a
sprawling system of surveillance cameras complete with facial recognition
technology, which were tested during anti-Kremlin rallies last year to track
down protesters. City authorities have also used cell phone location data from
mobile providers to monitor those who were ordered to self-quarantine for two
weeks after arriving from abroad. Russia took early steps to counter the
outbreak, closing the borders with China and then barring access to Chinese
citizens last month when China was still the world's hottest coronavirus spot. Authorities
followed up by screening arrivals from Italy, France, Spain and other countries
worst-affected by the outbreak, and obliging them to self-quarantine. Last week
Russia cut all international commercial flights and finally fully closed its borders
effective Monday, with the exception of diplomats, truck drivers and a few
other categories. Russian officials said those measures helped slow down the
spread of COVID-19, but acknowledged that the disease is accelerating rapidly
and relatively low numbers of confirmed cases could be explained by
insufficient screening. For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or
moderate symptoms such as fever and cough. But for others, especially older
adults and people with prior health problems, it can cause severe symptoms like
pneumonia and can be fatal. Authorities have converted several hospitals in
Moscow to treat coronavirus patients and thousands of construction workers
labored around the clock at a construction site on Moscow's outskirts to build
a new specialized hospital to be ready in a few weeks. The Defense Ministry
also launched a massive effort to build 16 hospitals across the country in a
matter of weeks. Last week, the military also conducted massive drills across
Russia to disinfect and quarantine broad areas.
Despite those efforts, many in
Russia worry that the nation's underfunded health care system that just
recently underwent massive cuts could be easily overwhelmed by the crisis. Putin
told his envoys in the regions Monday that they must quickly report the real
situation with ventilators and other essential equipment, prepare for moving
seriously ill patients between regions and mobilize medical personnel,
including medical students. He also ordered a sharp increase in screening.
Until last week, just one laboratory in Siberia was analyzing the coronavirus
tests. In a move reflecting the gravity of the crisis, Putin last week
postponed a vote on constitutional amendments that would allow him to stay in
office until 2036 if he chooses. Russian authorities haven’t restricted travel
to and from the capital city. Many residents of the Moscow region commute to
work in the capital. In a sign of lack of sync between various state agencies
amid quick-paced developments, police in the Moscow region on Sunday night announced
a curfew on top of the lockdown, but the authorities quickly denied the
announcement. Putin has hailed Moscow's lockdown as “necessary and
justified." St. Petersburg, Russia's second largest city, and over a dozen
other regions from the westernmost exclave of Kaliningrad to Tatarstan on the
Volga River to the Yekaterinburg region in the Urals quickly followed Moscow's
example and imposed similar lockdowns. Russia's leading opposition figure,
Alexei Navalny, on Monday blasted the Kremlin for longtime neglect of the
country's hospitals and called for public donations to help them. He posted a
letter from a doctor at one of Moscow's hospitals treating coronavirus patients
who said staff have run out of protective suits and have to reuse those they
have worn. Kremlin critics also voiced concern that the government would use
the lockdown to further tighten political controls and crack down on dissent.
The authorities already have declared a campaign against “fake news” about the
coronavirus, tracking down social media users making claims that contradict
official figures on coronavirus figures. Some already have been given heavy
fines.
^ I had Russian friends (both
inside Russia and around the world) tell me that the world was over-reacting
about Covid-19 and now it seems Moscow is finally taking this pandemic
seriously with a very right lockdown. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/moscow-goes-lockdown-rest-russia-180305674.html
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