Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 30 – “All methods of
combatting the coronavirus in the Russian Federation are pursuing a single goal
– saving the image of the state at any price” regardless of how many Russians
become infected or die, according to Kaliningrad journalist Mikhail Feldman.
The first line in the Kremlin’s
defense is simply lying, he says. Many domestic experts say that the number of
cases in the Russian Federation is vastly higher than Moscow admits. The second
is not testing. Without tests, it is possible to ascribe to the flu or
pneumonia what is in fact the spread of the pandemic (region.expert/covid-kenig/).
Moreover, Russian tests are inadequate;
and despite claims, they aren’t being offered free at least beyond the ring road.
In Kaliningrad, Feldman points out, people have to pay and many are too poor to
pay or to travel to the only test site. And there is little evidence the
authorities are seeking to identify those who have been in contact with
infected people and have them tested.
The third of Moscow’s defense is to
ignore the threat that China posed and continues to pose in favor of attacking
Western countries, Feldman continues. Moscow doesn’t want to offend Beijing and
so accepts its assurances that all is well and continues to list the US and the
Western European countries as the source of the problem.
The fourth line is to deny that
there are any “hotspots” within the Russian Federation and take action to
prevent the spread from them to other places. It is common ground in the medical
profession that Moscow is one such place, but its people have been allowed to
travel and thus infect others.
In the case of Kaliningrad, Feldman
says, at least four people have been infected by coming into contact with Russian
officials dispatched from the center.
And the fifth line is to deploy the siloviki
against doctors who suggest the official version of events isn’t true.
Anastasiya Vasiliyeva, head of the Doctors’ Alliance, said that the situation in
Russia is far more dire than the Kremlin admits. Now, she has been harassed by
the force structures and threatened with fines.
While not one of these lines of
defense, there is another aspect of the fight against the pandemic in Russia
that is of concern, especially in areas outside of Moscow and far from media
attention: where stay at home orders have been issued, the siloviki are using
them as another means to extract money from the population by demanding bribes
for those who violate the rule.
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