From MT:
“Moscow Restaurants Struggle
to Stay Afloat Under New Virus Restrictions”
All of the city's eateries now
require customers to present QR codes proving they have been vaccinated,
negative PCR tests or proof of recovery from Covid-19. Tilda Food & Bar, a
tiny gastropub in central Moscow that’s usually bursting at the seams, has been
empty almost every day this week since the Russian capital introduced strict
new rules for diners in an attempt to halt the spread of the highly infectious Delta
variant of the coronavirus. “Usually at
this time we have a full house,” manager Margarita Dubrovskaya told The Moscow
Times on Thursday at lunchtime as she surveyed tables and chairs devoid of
customers.
From June 28, all Moscow
restaurants and cafes have required visitors to present QR codes proving they
have been vaccinated, negative PCR tests taken within the past 72 hours or
proof of recent recovery from Covid-19. In
a city with just 16% of residents vaccinated, the new requirements are a
disaster for the hospitality industry. While people without QR codes can still
sit on terraces until July 12, many restaurants, including Tilda, have limited
options for outdoor seating .The problem is being exacerbated by glitches in
the system, with foreigners living in the capital who have been vaccinated with
Sputnik V or recovered from the virus
reporting difficulty obtaining their QR codes through Moscow's government
portal website. Russia on Friday said it would not impose a new lockdown
despite reporting a record number of coronavirus deaths for the fourth day in a
row.
Outside Tilda, Dubrovskaya
greeted guests and seated them at her only pavement table. “We had a bunch of
regulars come yesterday and sit outside, some were just standing and drinking,”
she said. Tinkoff Bank estimates that
restaurant revenues fell by at least 50% on the first day of the introduction
of the rules, according to the RBC news website. Some Moscow restaurants are
ignoring the new requirements and continuing to serve customers as usual. Lilit Ambartsumyan, 31, is general director of
the Shu-Shu Georgian restaurant and bar in Moscow, which is welcoming all
customers regardless of their QR-code status. “The government’s requirements are complete
nonsense and we are not going to discriminate between vaccinated and
unvaccinated customers,” Ambartsumya told Moscow Times. Shu-Shu has already
received its first fine after officials in civilian clothing visited when they
saw an Instagram post announcing the
restaurant would be breaking the rules. Fines range from 100,000 ($1,363) to
500,000 rubles. Ambartsumyan remains
undeterred. “We and 11 other
restaurateurs are in the process of filing a petition to the Moscow authorities
because something needs to change otherwise our businesses will die,” she said.
Despite the decision to stay open to all customers, Ambartsumyan said Shu-Shu
has still suffered losses. “We have lost
about 70% of our revenue just this week,” Ambartsumyan said. Tatiana Yatskova,
owner of the Pravilnoye Prostranstvo (Right Space) coffee shop, is also
refusing to follow Sobyanin’s QR code requirements. "I'm not afraid of being fined. I will
appeal to them. It's illegal to fine us,” Yatskova said. On the coffee shop’s Instagram page, Yatskova
called the new laws “fascist.” "Maybe
there are other restaurant owners who want to join us, but they are afraid. Do
not hesitate, join us!" Yatskova said.
When Moscow went into strict lockdown
in April 2020, many restaurants were forced to close or switch to delivery only
with limited staff. “That’s how it started last year, at first there were less
people and then the next thing you know we had to close because delivery wasn’t
enough to justify the costs for us,” said Tilda’s Dubrovskaya. Moscow
Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has introduced a rescue package to help Moscow
restaurants cover the losses, including subsidies for small and medium-sized
businesses and allowing restaurants leasing premises from the government to
defer rent. However, restaurant managers
say the measures are mostly symbolic. “We
cannot defer rent because only a small percentage of restaurants actually rent
from the city, most of us are left to fend for ourselves,” Ambartsumyan said. Dubrovskaya said she had tried and failed to
apply for subsidies during lockdown. “We
had to collect a lot of documents and still didn’t get anything so we’re not
counting on any government support,” she said.
^ Covid infections, hospitalizations
and deaths continue to rapidly increase throughout Russia because the vast majority
of Russians will not get vaccinated since they don’t trust the Russian-made and
secretive Vaccines. If Russians had access to the Moderna or Pfizer Covid
Vaccines I think more would get vaccinated and so more would live. As for the
restaurants in Moscow: I understand the difficult situation they are in –
especially with little to no outside help and the Government System not working
correctly. ^
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