Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 5 – Patriarch Kirill
will not get vaccinated against the coronavirus until all clinical trials are
completed, Vakhtang Kipshidze, the head of the Patriarchate’s office for media
relations says. The patriarch’s position
will reinforce the views of many Russians that they should avoid getting the
vaccine until it has proved itself.
That could delay the time at which
Russia might acquire herd immunity far into the future. Two days ago, Denis
Logunov, head of the Gamaley Laboratories which developed the Sputnik-5
medication says the third phase of testing won’t be completed for as much as a
year (credo.press/232830/).
That in turn means that Russia is
likely to see more waves of infection in the coming months and that other
countries will be more reluctant to open themselves to Russian visitors lest
they bring the coronavirus with them. Both these trends are likely to make it
more, not less difficult for the Russian economy to recover.
Vladimir Putin and his regime have
stressed from the beginning that Russians will be free to choose whether to get
the vaccine or not, but the powers that be recently have also celebrated those
senior officials like the mayor of Moscow and the defense minister who have
chosen to do so.
Kirill’s decision to express his
reluctance in this way not only complicates Putin’s plans but undermines the
Kremlin’s insistence that the Russian vaccine is safe and effective. Only
someone who has profound doubts about that would say what Kirill has announced.
What remains to be seen is what other church hierarchs, including those close to
Putin, will do.
If most fall in line with the patriarch, the number of Russians who will get the vaccine in the near term will plunge. If a split emerges, this could easily become the wedge issue that Putin might use to rein in or even replace Kirill.
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