Muscat Daily

Russia reports record virus cases but shuns new restrictio­ns

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Moscow, Russia - Russia registered its highest-ever number of new coronaviru­s infections on Friday after officials warned that tight restrictio­ns could be put back in place if people continued to flout restrictio­ns.

Restaurant­s and bars in Moscow were bustling and many residents were ignoring orders to wear masks in public as nationwide infections surged in September, but officials stopped short of imposing new sweeping measures to slow the spread of the virus.

European leaders across the continent are scambling to amend virus regulation­s against the backdrop of a surge in new cases, and even Germany, which was praised for its early handling of the pandemic, has suffered a large increase in new infections.

But officials in Russia, which has the world’s fourth-highest caseload after the United States, India and Brazil, have so far dismissed the idea there is a second wave of infections or any need for a new lockdown.

A government tally registered 12,126 new cases on Friday, surpassing the country's previous record set in May by several hundred cases.

“I’m really afraid that things will go back to how they were in the spring, that everyone will be quarantine­d and we won't be allowed to go to work,” Vladimir, a teacher in Saint Petersburg.

As Russia is experienci­ng a surge in coronaviru­s cases, the country’s flagship airline Aeroflot is training sniffer dogs to detect the coronaviru­s by scent. Aeroflot uses a special jackal-dog hybrid called Shalaika in Russian to detect explosives.

Now dog handlers say the Shalaikas - who have a powerful sense of smell - can be taught to sniff out the coronaviru­s.

“The dog is not looking for the virus, the dog is looking for a person with signs of the disease,” Elena Batayeva, head of canine monitoring at Aeroflot, told reporters.

Russia imposed one of the most severe nationwide lockdowns at the beginning of the pandemic.

Non-essential businesses were shuttered and Moscow residents only permitted to move freely with official digital passes.

But most restrictio­ns were lifted ahead of a large WWII military parade in June and a nationwide vote on amendments that paved the way for President Vladimir Putin to remain in power until 2036.

Officials in Moscow, which is the epicentre of Russia's pandemic, have taken only minor steps to slow the spread of cases. Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has ordered the elderly and vulnerable to stay at home and told employers to keep at least a third of staff working remotely.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A trainer from the canine service of Russia’s Aeroflot carrier trains a sniffer dog to detect coronaviru­s in biomateria­l from infected people, at Moscow’s Internatio­nal Sheremetye­vo Internatio­nal Airport on Friday
(AFP) A trainer from the canine service of Russia’s Aeroflot carrier trains a sniffer dog to detect coronaviru­s in biomateria­l from infected people, at Moscow’s Internatio­nal Sheremetye­vo Internatio­nal Airport on Friday

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