The Sunday Guardian

From Russia with cabin fever: Coronaviru­s evacuees compare notes

- TOM BALMFORTH MOSCOW

Those confined in the facility are whiling away time by swapping notes on social media with other affected nations.

It’s a refurbishe­d Soviet-style sanatorium, but there are no visitors, staff wear decontamin­ation suits and riot police stand guard outside in temperatur­es of around -15 Celsius.

In the fenced-off complex in Siberia, 144 people have been put in quarantine under close observatio­n for two weeks after the Russian military evacuated them this week from the epicentre of the coronaviru­s epidemic, the Chinese city of Wuhan.

Among them is Vladimir Markov who says those confined in the facility are whiling away the time by swapping notes on social media with people in Europe and the United States who are being similarly quarantine­d to stop the coronaviru­s spreading.

“The Belgians are in a military hospital and they have beer. They’re allowed out and they can wander the corridors in masks. We have total imprisonme­nt. Some of the French are in Marseille with a view of the sea,” Markov said.

Hundreds of people have been quarantine­d at sites across the world after leaving China.

When Markov, 36, arrived in the Tyumen area of Siberia from Wuhan on Wednesday, people in full-body decontamin­ation, or hazmat, suits took away his clothes, issued him striped pyjamas and gave him a room with another evacuee and told them they couldn’t leave the room for a fortnight.

“We have woods, silver birches. It’s all very Russian. The Americans have been sent somewhere like California... I don’t know how they live. The Kazakhs are also locked up in hospital,” he said by phone from the Siberian facility.

He and his roommate have a TV, laptops and their own

In Siberia, 144 people have been quarantine­d for two weeks after they were evacuated from Wuhan.

phones, but their only physical contact with the outside world is with the medical staff who bring them food in the hazmat suits and who take their temperatur­es regularly starting at 5am.

Markov, a Russian national who has lived abroad for 12 years and also has Dutch citizenshi­p, had been working with microchips in China for just three months when the virus hit.

The bulk of the people in the facility are Russians, while some are from former Soviet states.

Markov told Reuters most of those quarantine­d were young and had dealt with the surreal circumstan­ces well, but that he thought some people’s patience would wear thin as time went on.

The 144 people were flown from China on two Ilyushin Il-76 military planes, a trip that took 13 hours. They sat on wooden benches covered with Soviet woollen blankets and the only toilets available were portaloos in tents. “All of it looks so surreal. People in full-body chemical protection suits are constantly coming in,” said Markov. “It’s like in the movies.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin listens to Minister of Health Mikhail Murashko during a meeting on preventing the spread of coronaviru­s, in Moscow, Russia 29 January 2020.
REUTERS Russian President Vladimir Putin listens to Minister of Health Mikhail Murashko during a meeting on preventing the spread of coronaviru­s, in Moscow, Russia 29 January 2020.

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