Daily coronavirus cases and deaths in Russia remained at their highest numbers of the pandemic on Wednesday as more regions announced extending existing restrictions in an effort to tame the country’s unrelenting surge of infections.
Russia’s state coronavirus task force reported 40,443 new confirmed cases from a day earlier. It was the fifth time in seven days that the country reported more than 40,000 infections. The task force also reported a daily record of 1,189 COVID-19 deaths.
Russia is five days into a nationwide non-working period that the government introduced to curb the spread of the virus.
Last month, the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, ordered many Russians to stay off work between October 30 and November 7. He authorised regional governments to extend the number of non-working days, if necessary.
Officials in Russia’s Novgorod region, located 310 miles northwest of Moscow, said on Monday that the time away from workplaces would last another week. Four other regions: the Tomsk region in Siberia, the Chelyabinsk region in the Ural Mountains, and the Kursk and the Bryansk regions southwest of Moscow — followed suit on Wednesday.
“One non-working week is not enough to break the chain of infection,” Tomsk governor Sergei Zhvachkin said.
Governors of at least three other regions have said they were considering extending the non-working period.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday that no decision on a possible nationwide extension has been made.
“If any other decisions are (made), we will inform you,” Peskov said during a conference call with reporters.
In Moscow and the surrounding region, which together account for nearly 25% of new daily infections, the non-working period will not be extended beyond November 7, officials said.
Moscow mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said infection rates in the capital have “stabilised”, and the governor of the Moscow region, Andrei Vorobyov, echoed his sentiment.
Certain restrictions will remain in place in the Russian capital, such as a stay-at-home order for older adults and a mandate for businesses to have 30% of their staffs work from home.
Access to theatres and museums is limited to those who either have been fully vaccinated, have recovered from Covid-19 within the last six months or can present a negative coronavirus test.
Russia’s weeks-long surge in infections and deaths comes amid low vaccination rates, lax public attitudes toward taking precautions and the government’s reluctance to toughen restrictions.
Less than 35% of Russia’s nearly 146 million people have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, even though Russia approved a domestically developed vaccine against the coronavirus months before most countries.