Moscow mayor warns of possible ‘limited but HARSH’ lockdown, citing worsening Covid-19 situation

With less than 10% of residents vaccinated and hospital beds filling up as new Covid-19 variants spread, Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin has warned that the Russian capital might be facing a short but very strict lockdown.

“We are very close to much more severe – temporary, but severe – decisions on restrictions,” Sobyanin said on Thursday. He noted that 600 Covid-19 patients have been hospitalized over the past 48 hours, and that Moscow has about 17,000 beds dedicated to coronavirus patients to date. Soon that number will exceed 20,000, he added, and “no European city can afford this.”

"Once again I’ll say, these capabilities are not endless,” Sobyanin told reporters.

Also on rt.com
Russian Emergencies Ministry workers in protective gear disinfect a platform of the Belorussky railway station amid the coronavirus outbreak in Moscow. © Sputnik / Pavel Bednyakov.
Moscow mayor orders week of paid leave for workers & imposes curfew on nightlife in bid to control sharp rise in Covid-19 cases

Last Friday, Sobyanin rolled out a series of restrictions after Moscow reported 6,701 positive tests in a 24-hour period, the highest number since January. Local employees were formally given a paid week off – dovetailing with Monday’s celebration of Russia Day – while employers were encouraged to send a third of the workforce home.

Playgrounds, children’s amusement rides in parks, and entertainment venues were shuttered, while restaurants, bars and nightclubs were given a curfew starting at 11pm and ending at 6am.

The measures don’t seem to have had the desired effect, however. On Thursday, Sobyanin said the new infections are mainly from new, more aggressive coronavirus variants, rather than the original Wuhan strain.

Moscow’s top coronavirus hospital currently has 1,447 coronavirus patients, of which 407 are in the intensive care unit, and 110 are connected to a ventilator, its director told RT on Wednesday.

Also on rt.com
Medical specialists wearing protective gear transport a patient at the City Hospital Number 40, where patients suffering from the coronavirus disease are treated, in Kommunarka settlement in the south of Moscow, Russia.
As Moscow's Covid-19 numbers rise, city's top virus hospital head says facility now has record number of patients on ventilators

Meanwhile, only 1.8 million Moscow residents have been vaccinated, out of the population of some 20 million. While vaccinations have increased threefold on Thursday alone, “that’s still not enough,” Sobyanin said.

With the Russian capital hardest hit by the pandemic, its residents need to be the first in line to protect themselves from infection and death through vaccination, the mayor wrote on his blog earlier this week. He noted that everyone has access to “one of the best and most reliable vaccines,” referring to the Russian-developed Sputnik V.

Sobyanin has already taken the unprecedented step of mandating vaccinations not just for healthcare workers, but employees in “public-facing” industries. Up to 60% of employees will have to get vaccinated in industries such as transportation, banking, food and beverage business, beauty salons and barbershops, theaters, museums, gyms, spas and massage parlors.

Also on rt.com
FILE PHOTO: A medical worker takes care of a patient at a temporary hospital in the Krylatskoye Ice Palace, where patients suffering from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) are treated, in Moscow, Russia June 11, 2021. © Denis Grishkin/Moscow News Agency/Handout via REUTERS
Moscow orders ‘mandatory’ vaccination against Covid-19 for some workers serving the public as cases soar in Europe’s largest city

While the decision to vaccinate or not is a matter of personal choice “so long as you sit at home,” those who go out in public and come into contact with others become “accomplices” to the pandemic, he said. 

“Moreover, if you work in an organization that serves a large circle of people, then in a pandemic it is definitely not only your own business, no matter what personal protective equipment you use,” Sobyanin concluded.

Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!



source https://www.rt.com/russia/526882-moscow-lockdown-mayor-coronavirus/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

No comments:

Post a Comment