China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese in Russia get full assistance

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

The Chinese embassy in Moscow maintains close contacts with its 160,000 citizens in the country, and will provide all necessary help to them, Beijing’s ambassador to Russia Zhang Hanhui said on Wednesday.

Speaking to Chinese media, Zhang dismissed reports about Chinese citizens being detained by Russian police and immigratio­n authoritie­s due to visa issues.

He said the embassy was told by the Russian Foreign Ministry on Wednesday that there were no Chinese being detained by Russian law enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

“There is lots of fake news on the internet. So the embassy hopes people get informatio­n from official channels, rather than listening to rumors,” said the ambassador.

Meanwhile, the port in Suifenhe city in China’s Heilongjia­ng province was temporaril­y closed on Tuesday as authoritie­s said the increasing numbers of arrivals were beyond the port’s ability to handle.

So, the Chinese consulate in the Russian city of Vladivosto­k, the capital of the Primorsky region which borders Heilongjia­ng, urged Chinese nationals not to return home through the port city.

“We urged all Chinese in Russia not to try to return from the Far East region,” said Zhang, pointing to the risks posed by the logistical challenges, as the pandemic continues around the world.

Risks of long travel time

Explaining the risks, he said that as many Chinese citizens flew over nine hours from Moscow to Vladivosto­k, and then took a bus to the border from the airport, the long time they spent in a confined space could be dangerous if anyone had symptoms of the virus.

Also, the long travel time was not in keeping with the epidemic prevention guidelines of the Russian government, Zhang added.

The envoy said that from March 28 to April 30, everyone in Russia, including Russians and foreign citizens, were to stay at home except for special circumstan­ces, such as going to grocery stores and pharmacies for necessitie­s, walking dogs, and going to work.

Separately, the chief of the Russian Medical Biological Agency, Veronika Skvortsova, said that as the daily growth in confirmed coronaviru­s cases in Russia was only about 20 percent, it was possible to avert a spike in morbidity with a strict quarantine and isolation policy.

As of Wednesday, the number of infections in Russia had risen by 1,175 in the previous 24 hours, reaching 8,672, with 580 recoveries and 63 deaths.

In a related developmen­t, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the government to hand over all non-woven material to companies making medical masks and protection suits.

Zhang Hanhui

 ?? EDUARD KORNIYENKO / REUTERS ?? Workers sew protective masks in a sewing shop in Kochubeyev­skoye in Stavropol region, Russia, on Tuesday.
EDUARD KORNIYENKO / REUTERS Workers sew protective masks in a sewing shop in Kochubeyev­skoye in Stavropol region, Russia, on Tuesday.
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