World News

Moscow orders fresh virus restrictions as deaths soar

Moscow’s mayor on Tuesday ordered the city’s first coronavirus restrictions since the summer, as Russia registered 1,015 daily COVID deaths, a new record. At the national level, the government is considering keeping people off work for a week to reduce social contact in a bid to lower the tide of infections.

President Vladimir Putin is expected to decide on Wednesday which government measures put to him should be implemented to curb the spread of the virus across the country.

But already Tuesday, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin ordered unvaccinated over-60s in the capital to work from home and extended mandatory vaccinations for service workers. Those restrictions take effect next Monday and are set to last until the end of February. Sobyanin also told employers to move 30 percent of their staff to home working.

“With every day the number of people hospitalised with the severe form of the disease is growing,” Sobyanin said in a statement.

The number of patients in a serious condition had “doubled” since the end of the summer, he added. Moscow’s mayor on Tuesday ordered the city’s first coronavirus restrictions since the summer, as Russia registered 1,015 daily COVID deaths, a new record.

At the national level, the government is considering keeping people off work for a week to reduce social contact in a bid to lower the tide of infections. President Vladimir Putin is expected to decide on Wednesday which government measures put to him should be implemented to curb the spread of the virus across the country.

But already Tuesday, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin ordered unvaccinated over-60s in the capital to work from home and extended mandatory vaccinations for service workers. Those restrictions take effect next Monday and are set to last until the end of February. Sobyanin also told employers to move 30 percent of their staff to home working.

“With every day the number of people hospitalised with the severe form of the disease is growing,” Sobyanin said in a statement. The number of patients in a serious condition had “doubled” since the end of the summer, he added.

The measures were announced after Russia on Tuesday registered a new 24-hour high of 1,015 coronavirus deaths, bringing the country’s official total to 225,325 — the highest in Europe. But figures published by statistics agency Rosstat in October suggested that more than 400,000 people had died in the country from the coronavirus.

Only 35 percent of Russians are vaccinated, and authorities are struggling to counter anti-vaccine sentiment. Independent polls show that more than half of Russians do not plan to get a shot, despite appeals from Putin.

Sobyanin said the authorities had hoped older Muscovites would vaccinate themselves after returning from the countryside at the end of the summer. There is a tradition to blame everything on the state,” Dmitry Peskov told reporters. But at the same time, we need a more responsible position from citizens of our country.

Western vaccines are not available in Russia, and Peskov insisted that bringing them into the country would not help the sluggish vaccination rates.

“The vaccinophobia of some citizens is not linked to the brand of vaccines,” he said. On Monday, the second city of Saint Petersburg announced it would tighten restrictions to battle the virus, introducing a health pass to regulate access to crowd events from November 1.

Source: eNCA

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