Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin on Saturday introduced a “non-working” week in the Russian capital, with non-essential workers told to stay home, as Covid-19 cases hit a six-month high.
The decision marks a change of tone for Russian authorities, with President Vladimir Putin repeatedly insisting that Russia has handled the pandemic better than most countries.
“During the past week the situation with the spread of the coronavirus infection has sharply deteriorated,” Sobyanin stated on his web site as town registered 6,701 each day infections, the very best quantity since December final 12 months. Sobyanin added that “1000’s” of hospital beds have been repurposed for coronavirus patients.
“We cannot not react to such a situation,” he stated. “To cease the expansion of infections and to save lots of individuals’s lives, immediately I signed a decree offering for non-working days between June 15-19.”
The order affects all employees in the Russian capital, a city of 12 million, except for essential workers. Non-essential workers are not required to work from home during the period, but will still retain their salaries.
Together with the weekends and a public holiday on June 14, it means most Moscow workers will not return to their offices until June 20.
More young patients
The mayor also announced the closure of food courts and playgrounds while restaurants, bars and clubs will be banned from serving customers between 23:00 and 06:00.
Sobyanin also called on employers to transfer at least 30 percent of non-vaccinated employees to working from home after the week-long shutdown.
Cases have been on the rise across the country in recent weeks as Russia struggles to innoculate its citizens despite domestic vaccines being widely available to the public.
A spike in infections has also been reported in Russia’s second city Saint Petersburg, which is co-hosting the Euro 2020 football championship.
Moscow deputy mayor Anastasia Rakova said Saturday that 78 percent of the 14,000 hospital beds for virus patients in the city were currently occupied.
“In Moscow hospitals working with coronavirus patients there are currently 498 people on ventilators, that’s almost 30 percent more than a week ago,” Rakova stated.
She stated over the previous two months there had been a “vital” increase in the number of young patients aged between 18 and 35.
Earlier this week, Sobyanin said Moscow would be opening several field hospitals to accomodate the influx of patients.
Slow vaccination
Russia has been among the countries hardest hit by the pandemic, with the sixth-highest number of cases in the world, according to an AFP tally.
Kremlin critics have accused authorities of downplaying the severity of the pandemic by only counting fatalities where the coronavirus was found to be the primary cause of death after autopsy.
On Saturday, Russia registered 13,510 new coronavirus cases and 399 deaths, according to a government tally. Russia imposed a strict lockdown when the pandemic first swept across the country last spring.
But within months authorities had lifted most measures, opting to protect the struggling economy and pinning their hopes on curbing the outbreak with vaccines.
Officials have registered four homegrown vaccines — Sputnik V, its single-dose version Sputnik Light, EpiVacCorona and CoviVac.
Russia’s domestic vaccination campaign started in early December, ahead of most countries, but Russians have been hesitant to sign up. Polls show that more than half of respondents do not intend to get vaccinated.
So far 18 million Russians – or 12 percent of the population — have received at least one dose of a vaccine.
Putin — who the Kremlin said was vaccinated in private with one of Russia’s jabs — has repeatedly called on Russians to get immunised.
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