Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 19 – The number of
those in Russia infected with the coronavirus continues to rise, but the powers
that be have ordered that the mortality rate must be only one percent, Mikhail
Tamm of the Higher School of Economics says; anyone who reported higher numbers
or challenged government figures is being punished (svoboda.org/a/30619087.html).
“If someone had not decided that we
needed to tell the entire world about the record low mortality from the
coronavirus, the real Russian figures would be something in which one could
almost take pride,” the scholar continues; but “instead of this, we decided
that our mortality rate would be one percent and journalists began to be
threatened.”
That pattern has not only increased
skepticism among Russians about everything Moscow is saying about the pandemic
and other things besides but it has led many to conclude that the situation is
far worse than it likely is, with one writer saying that “we have a situation
just like that in the US but only later and worse” (forum-msk.org/material/news/16459874.html).
As a result, Russians are more
frightened than they would be if officials were being honest with them.
According to a new VTsIOM poll, 60 percent of them fear that they or their
relatives will become infected, and 31 percent will lose their jobs or see
their incomes fall significantly (iarex.ru/news/75242.html).
Today,
the number of new infections was 9263, the fourth day in a row in which they
were under 10,000. But the total number of cases has now reached 299,941 (kavpolit.com/articles/v_rossii_za_sutki_vyjavleno_9263_zarazivshihsja_ko-38656/).
But if testing were more widespread, perhaps as many as 10 million infections
would be found (echo.msk.ru/blog/aav/2644925-echo/).
Russia’s GDP fell by 28 percent in
April with government revenues falling by at least that much, a major reason
why the Kremlin has sought to declare victory and reopen the economy as quickly
as it has, even though premature re-opening may lead to more infections and
deaths (rbc.ru/economics/19/05/2020/5ec1a2bb9a79471ed0de4175
and rosbalt.ru/blogs/2020/05/19/1844203.html).
Regional
heads who have to make that choice are under enormous and competing pressure to
protect the population and bring the economy back. Not surprisingly some are
swinging in one direction and then another. Sverdlovsk Oblast head Yevgeny Kuivashev,
for example, announced reopening and then closed many things down again (politsovet.ru/66485-nehoroshiy-signal-kak-gubernator-kuyvashev-poobeschal-no-ne-otkryl-tc.html).
One consequence of decisions having
to be made at the regional level is that distortions in statistics are likely being
introduced there with those governors who want to reopen flattening the curve
on their own while those who don’t are allowing more accurate figures to be
distributed and sent upward (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2020/05/18/85423-vserossiyskiy-falstart).
Among the federal subjects
particularly hard hit and where popular anger is highest is Daghestan. To try
to calm the situation, Vladimir Putin held a video conference with the republic’s
leaders and heads of social organizations last night. It is unclear whether his
action calmed or alarmed people (nazaccent.ru/content/33144-vladimir-putin-obsudil-situaciyu-s-koronavirusom.html).
Although
the pandemic is continuing, many are looking beyond it. Some say that the
restrictions now being put in place will continue afterwards to help the regime
control the population, but others predict massive protests (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2020/05/19/85438-vek-svobody-ne-vidat
and regnum.ru/news/society/2954503.html).
Perhaps most
intriguingly, some are saying the pandemic crisis may have an upside in forcing
Russia to change its reliance on oil and gas exports and instead develop a
diverse domestic economy that can export finished goods rather than only raw
materials (echo.msk.ru/blog/nikolaev_i/2645191-echo/).
Meanwhile, other pandemic-related
developments in Russia included:
·
Russian
activists have joined others from around the world to collect the names of
those doctors and other medical workers so to be in a position to honor those
who have died fighting the coronavirus. As of today, there were more than 240
names on their list (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2020/05/19/85439-geroev-ne-nazyvayut).
·
Demobilized
soldiers returning to Russian-occupied Crimea are bringing the virus with them
and may infect the peninsula’s civilian population (qha.com.ua/ru/po-polochkam/soldat-vernetsya-s-covidom-ty-tolko-zhdi-primusovij-prizov-pid-chas-pandemiyi-zagrozhuye-zhittyu-i-zdorov-yu-molodih-krimchan/).
·
Medical
experts say that the situation even in Moscow’s hospitals is not anything like
what the media portray. Instead, they suggest, breakdowns and shortages and
other inefficiencies have turned what should be places where people can get
help into “nightmares” (regnum.ru/news/society/2954328.html).
·
Property
prices in Russia are generally declining during the pandemic but there are some
exceptions, like houses far from cities, where prices are rising because of
increasing demand (regnum.ru/news/economy/2953075.html).
·
Deaths
from the pandemic have reignited a debate among Russian specialists as to what
price should be put on human lives so that the courts can calculate compensation
(polit.ru/article/2020/05/19/coronacost/).
·
Businesses
are pressuring the government to change the labor code so that they can fire
workers more rapidly than had been the case before the pandemic (ura.news/articles/1036280241).
·
A
third mufti in the North Caucasus has become infected with the coronavirus, as
the disease moves through the ranks of Muslim leaders in a fashion similar to
but not quite as fast as through those of the Russian Orthodox clergy (doshdu.com/tretij-muftij-na-severnom-kavkaze-zabolel-koronavirusom/).
·
Because
of the stress of self-isolation, job loss, and fear of infection, demands for
the services of psychologists in Russia has shot up 69 percent since the beginning
of the pandemic (iz.ru/1012584/ekaterina-iasakova/stress-karantirovan-spros-na-psikhologov-vo-vremia-pandemii-vyros-na-69).
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