Bangkok Post

Russia’s Dagestan facing virus havoc

Officials warn of ‘catastroph­e’ as deaths go uncounted, writes Romain Colas

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President Vladimir Putin was forced to intervene personally on Monday in the epidemic sweeping Russia’s North Caucasus region of Dagestan, as local officials described the coronaviru­s situation as a “catastroph­e”.

For several days now, there have been rumours of mounting fatalities and overwhelme­d hospitals in the mountainou­s majority-Muslim region and local medical staff have taken to social media to make frantic appeals.

Dagestan’s top cleric, Mufti Akhmad Abdulayev, described the situation as dire and pleaded to the Kremlin for help.

“The scope of the catastroph­e is forcing us to appeal to you,” he told Mr Putin via video link on Monday. “Please, bring your attention to Dagestan.”

The region’s health minister, Dzhamaludi­n Gadzhiibra­gimov, said that 657 people had died of pneumonia in the region, including 40 medics.

According to a regional breakdown of Russia’s official coronaviru­s tally, only 29 Covid-19 deaths have been recorded in the region of 2.9 million people by Monday.

Critics have accused Russian authoritie­s of downplayin­g the crisis and manipulati­ng the figures by attributin­g coronaviru­s deaths to so-called community-acquired pneumonia and other medical conditions.

Medics said they faced shortages of protective equipment and tests, and Mr Abdulayev said that many people with the infection die at home and are buried at mass traditiona­l funerals.

“They are buried according to tradition and nobody counts them,” Mr Abdulayev said.

Mr Putin promised to send aid to Dagestan, and asked residents not to gather for the Eid celebratio­n marking the end of Ramadan this weekend.

‘URGENT MEASURES’

“The situation in the Republic of Dagestan is complicate­d and of course calls for additional — and urgent — measures,” Mr Putin said during the video conference.

Doctors said they have been overwhelme­d by the number of patients, while the lack of medical supplies had left people in the region feeling abandoned.

Ambulance medic Sakinat Magomedova working in the town of Kizilyurt said there were so many pneumonia hospitalis­ations in April that “sometimes we didn’t have time to disinfect the ambulance” between calls.

The 45-year-old finally fell ill on April 26 and was diagnosed with pneumonia.

“I couldn’t breathe,” she said. “I really thought I was going to die.”

Despite exhibiting common symptoms of Covid-19, she said she was never swabbed for coronaviru­s because there were no tests in her town.

“People have been abandoned,” she said.

Another medic who declined to give his name said he has used the same mask for a month, which he washes in chlorine after each shift.

“There is an enormous number of patients. I’ve never seen this before,” he said.

‘LACK OF PREPARATIO­N’ Dagestan’s Governor Vladimir Vasiliev on Monday defended the region’s official coronaviru­s statistics, but promised to “clarify” the number of fatalities among the region’s medics.

State channel Rossiya 24 reported on Monday that Dagestan’s statistics could be distorted because “only 3% of families give consent to autopsies”.

Russia enters fatalities into its national coronaviru­s tally only after an autopsy has confirmed the infection was the primary cause of death.

“We were faced with total lack of preparatio­n by the healthcare system,” said Ziautdin Uvaisov, who works in a regional aid organisati­on called Patient’s Monitor.

He said the region did not move fast enough to secure enough tests, or to inform the population about containmen­t measures.

Mr Ziautdin added that locals may be less likely to follow orders.

Tradition in the Caucasus dictates large gatherings for weddings and funerals, and people may have been reluctant to drop the custom despite the rules.

“The population is very suspicious of the authoritie­s and of official instructio­ns,” he said.

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