From the CBC:
“'This situation is very scary':
Coronavirus is disrupting Vladimir Putin's Russia”
In Yakutia, in Russia's far north
east — easily one of the most remote resource regions on the planet — isolation
appears to be the least of concerns among its more than 10,000 oil field
workers. "We're infected! Where's the f---ing quarantine? Where are the
f---ing masks?" employees shouted in an angry rant aimed at their company
and local government posted on a Russian social media site earlier this week. As
many as 10,500 workers at the Chayanda oil field site have been tested for
COVID-19, and though the results haven't been released, the website Meduza
quotes the regional governor as saying the number of positive cases is
"very significant." The availability
— or rather scarcity — of protective gear at facilities and institutions closer
to the country's major population centres appears to be equally problematic. "Here
is the real truth about Reutov hospital [near Moscow] — there is no personal
protective equipment in the coronavirus department!" one hospital worker
wrote this week on a whistleblower Facebook page set up by frustrated Russian
health-care workers.
"Staff wear [their]
disposable protective equipment over and over again.": Another video viewed by CBC News showed
COVID-19 patients in a hospital in the city of Derbent, Republic of Dagestan,
crammed into makeshift bunks in what appears to be storage room, coughing and
hacking with IVs in their arms. They were being tended by a nurse who wasn't wearing
a mask or any other protective gear. COVID-19 appeared to come late to Russia,
compared with North America and Europe, but now it's striking with a vengeance,
the damage compounded by the lack of personal protective equipment for hospital
workers. There are almost daily reports across the vast country — from St.
Petersburg to Siberia — of hospitals being quarantined because of coronavirus
outbreaks among staff. On Thursday, the state news agency RIA novesti reported
that Prime Minister Mikhail Mishutsin tested positive for the coronavirus and
is in self-isolation. He is so far the most senior member of government known
to have contracted the virus. President Vladimir Putin has not been seen in
public with Mishutsin in weeks, and the prime minister broke the news by video
conference.
Doctors dying: Among health care workers, the toll has
been so high over the past fortnight or so that colleagues have started
compiling the names of the dead on an online memorial page — 74 names as of
Tuesday night and growing. Among them was Natalia Lebedeva, who headed up
medical services at Russia's cosmonaut training centre outside Moscow. She
allegedly died after falling out a window — a fate that has become strikingly
common over the years for those who either disapprove of or disappoint Russian
authorities. Independent Russian media reported Lebedeva may have committed
suicide after being blamed for letting the coronavirus spread throughout the
facility. Another doctor from Siberia may also have tried to take her life by
similarly jumping out of a fifth-storey window at her workplace in Siberia. As
in the cosmonaut hospital case, local media reported that Yelena Nepomnyashchay
was blamed by authorities for an outbreak of the virus. She survived but is in
critical condition.
Putin's plan: For the first time, Putin has acknowledged
Russia is having trouble meeting the demands for enough personal protective
equipment for its health-care workers. In an address Tuesday, Putin admitted
that "there is still a shortage of some technical items, equipment and
disposable materials," despite increasing production of masks 10-fold in
April and making more than 100,000 protective suits every day. "We have
concentrated and mobilized all our industrial resources," he said. Russia
is poised to surpass 100,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the country, with
approximately 900 reported deaths. Those are extremely low numbers compared
with the experience of western Europe, where more than 20,000 people have died
in each of the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Spain. Many doctors — even
those sympathetic to the government — have told CBC News part of the challenge
is that Russia's tests return an unusually large number of false negative
results.
As COVID-19 cases spike in
Russia, the Kremlin struggles to respond:
Other health officials linked to opposition groups believe many deaths
are also either deliberately or unintentionally misrepresented. For example,
the Russian business publication RBC quoted Moscow's deputy mayor as saying
cases of pneumonia increased more than 70 per cent in the past week, filling up
urgent-care beds in the city. Since many
coronavirus patients develop pneumonia, the head of a doctors advocacy group told
CBC News in an earlier interview that it's fair to assume most of those
patients had COVID-19.
Economic disaster: Putin is also facing increasing pressure
over the enormous economic cost of the coronavirus lockdown, now into its fifth
week in the capital Moscow. Russia's labour ministry reported Tuesday that
unemployment could soon reach six million people. Many of those out of work
would only be eligible to receive a meagre maximum payout of roughly $200 Cdn a
month. Others who are self-employed might not get anything. "They can't
survive in this situation if the lockdown is prolonged," said opposition
politician Dmitry Gudkov. Gudkov is among those calling on the Putin
administration to release some of the money in Russia's huge sovereign wealth
fund, which holds more than $150 billion US. When oil revenues were stronger,
the money was set aside by the Putin administration to help ease the shock of
any future economic sanctions that might be imposed by the West. But Gudkov
says the money should be spent now, by making direct payments to people, as has
been done in Canada and the United States. "He doesn't want to spend this
reserve fund," Gudkov told CBC News.
Frustration growing: "Putin needs the money to maintain the
'Putin forever' model," a reference to the Russian leader's attempts to
change the constitution to allow him to serve two more terms as Russia's
president. Gudkov says Putin has a long list of "legacy projects" he
wants built, and spending money on direct payments to people will deplete the
funds for that. But frustration is growing, as jobs dry up and the Kremlin
offers people little in return, Gudkov says. "If there is a choice to die
from hunger or the virus, it's better to die from the virus." In his
remarks Tuesday, Putin indicated the government is preparing another round of
economic assistance for individuals and businesses, but he didn't offer any
clues to what it might be. He also suggested that some parts of Russia might be
able to start easing their lockdown and returning to work after a holiday
period that ends in mid-May.
'Very scary' for Russian
government: In an online discussion
hosted by the Carnegie Centre in Moscow, liberal-leaning Russian economist
Sergei Guriev, who is based in Paris, suggested COVID-19 represents the most
difficult challenge Putin has faced in the 20 years he has sat atop Russia's
power structure.Guriev says street protests against the lockdown may become
more frequent, as Russians run out of money and face difficulties feeding their
families. "We are in very uncharted waters," he said. "This
situation is very scary for the Russian government."
^ For years now Russia has
focused more on its international presence rather than its own citizens and the
Covid-19 pandemic and lack of response, lack of education, lack of supplies,
lack of Doctors, lack of everything across the country shows the true scope of
everyday life for ordinary Russians. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/russia-brown-scary-coronavirus-1.5548593
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