Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 28 – Today, according
to official figures, more Russians have died from the coronavirus than did
during nine years of the Soviet war in Afghanistan, a measure of just how hard
the pandemic has hit their country even if one accepts the official figures
which almost all observers say understate the problem (forum-msk.org/material/news/16601601.html).
Moscow officials said that 150 more
deaths from the pandemic had been recorded over the last 24 hours, bringing
that total to 13,504. Also during the last day, there were registered 5395 new
cases of infection, bringing that total to 823,515 (t.me/COVID2019_official/1147).
The number of new infections continued
to fall, although today’s death toll rose compared to the last week. But those
figures ignored the variations across the Russian Federation. In some regions,
infections have risen dramatically while in others they have fallen, with
restrictions generally tracking these rates (regnum.ru/news/society/3016015.html).
For many Russians, the most
important restriction on their lives did not go away: the EU has not put Russia
on the list of countries whose nationals do not have to undergo testing in
order to enter its member countries. EU officials said that “unfortunately
statistics say that it is too early to do that” (tass.ru/mezhdunarodnaya-panorama/9065233).
The Barents Observer highlighted why
this is the case. It compared coronavirus figures in the western portions of
the Russian Federation with those in Norway
and Finland and found that the Russian figures continue to be much higher (thebarentsobserver.com/en/life-and-public/2020/07/murmansk-region-alone-has-more-covid-19-infections-norway-and-finland).
One place where infections have
increased in Khabarovsk, a trend officials blame on the protests there (regnum.ru/news/3021420.html). Another
are popular domestic vacation destinations, like Krasnodar Kray and
Russian-occupied Crimea, where people are taking fewer precautions and the
virus is spreading with new force (mbk-news.appspot.com/suzhet/otdyx-v-pandemiyu-chto/).
Fears of a second wave are spreading
as well. Doctors, however, say that a
new and more aggressive strain of the virus from Vietnam is part of the first
wave not a harbinger of the second (ura.news/news/1052442625).
And Superjob reports that only 12 percent of Russians are preparing for a
second round of self-isolation (regnum.ru/news/3021557.html).
Government officials are also
preparing for a new wave of the pandemic, although they are playing down the
risk by suggesting that this program, which would keep many things open that
were shut down in the first, is only “Plan B” (versia.ru/v-rossii-gotovyat-plan-b-dlya-magazinov-i-obshhepita-na-sluchaj-vtoroj-volny-covid-19).
Russian
scientists continue to work on both vaccines and treatments for coronavirus
infections. They have now registered with the government 118 testing systems,
more than 50 of which are Russian-designed (regnum.ru/news/3021781.html),
and doctors are using with some success drugs developed for alcoholism and cancer
against the virus (https://iq.hse.ru/news/382735394.html).
Economic news at both the macro and
micro level continued to be dire. One economist says Russia is at risk of default
(business-gazeta.ru/article/476122).
More than 40 percent of Russians say they sometimes don’t have enough money to
last until their next paychecks (agoniya.eu/archives/7251).
And 30 to 40 percent of immigrant workers in Russia are now unemployed, (rosbalt.ru/piter/2020/07/28/1855994.html).
To deal with the fact that many
Russians may be out of work for lengthy periods of time, two officials have
come up with a plan to provide all Russians with certificates that could become
the basis for the Russian government to provide minimum incomes for all (eastrussia.ru/material/eksperty-predlozhili-dat-vsem-rossiyanam-sertifikaty-na-poteryannye-dokhody/).
Meanwhile, in two other
pandemic-related developments in Russia today,
·
Automobile
dealers say that selling cars online has become extremely popular since the onset
of the pandemic (regnum.ru/news/3021693.html).
·
And
a municipal deputy has brought a class action suit against Putin for violating the
rights of children over 16 by not giving
them the subsidies they should have received (tvrain.ru/news/k_putinu_podali_kollektivnyj_isk_o_narushenijah_prav_detej_starshe_16_let_iz_za_koronavirusnyh_vyplat-513307/).
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