Baltimore Sun Sunday

Russia mandates shots as virus spikes

Only about 11% of the population has been fully vaccinated

- By Daria Litvinova

MOSCOW — They tried grocery giveaways and lotteries for new cars and apartments. But an ambitious plan of vaccinatin­g 30 million Russians by mid-June still has fallen short by a third.

So now, many regional government­s across the vast country are obligating some workers to get vaccinated and requiring the shots to enter certain businesses, like restaurant­s.

As many Western countries lift coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and plan a return to normal life after mass vaccinatio­ns, Russia is battling a surge of infections — even though it was the first in the world to authorize a vaccine and among the first to start administer­ing it in December.

Daily new cases have grown from about 9,000 in early June to about 17,000 on June 18 and over 20,000 on Thursday and Friday.

Officials have blamed Russians’ lax attitude toward taking necessary precaution­s and the growing prevalence of more infectious variants. But perhaps the biggest factor is the lack of vaccinatio­ns.

Over 21 million people, or about 14% of the population of 146 million, have received at least one shot as of Friday. According to figures from earlier last week, only 16.7 million, or about 11%, have been fully vaccinated.

Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said only 0.5% of those who had gotten both doses have contracted COVID-19.

Experts say those numbers are due to several factors, including the public’s wariness of the rushed approval and rollout of the Sputnik V vaccine; an official narrative that Russia had tamed

its outbreak; criticism on state TV of other vaccines as dangerous; and a weak promotiona­l campaign that included incentives such as consumer giveaways.

In light of the surge, 18 Russian regions — from Moscow and St. Petersburg to the remote far-eastern region of Sakhalin — made vaccinatio­ns mandatory this month for employees in certain sectors, such as government offices, retail, health care, education, restaurant­s and other service industries.

Moscow authoritie­s said companies should suspend without pay employees unwilling to get vaccinated, and they threatened to temporaril­y halt operations of businesses that don’t meet the goal of having 60% of staff get at least one shot by July 15 and both shots by Aug. 15.

As of Monday, all Moscow restaurant­s, cafes and bars

will admit only customers who have been vaccinated, have recovered from COVID19 in the past six months, or can provide a negative coronaviru­s test from the previous 72 hours. City officials also limited most elective hospital care to those who are fully vaccinated or can provide tests showing they have antibodies to fight the infection.

The moves seem to be an act of desperatio­n by authoritie­s.

“They backed themselves into a corner, they have no choice now,” said Judy Twigg, a political science professor specializi­ng in global health at Virginia Commonweal­th University.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisted Friday there were no mandatory vaccinatio­ns and “no one is making” Russians get shots. Earlier last week, Peskov explained that those required to get vaccinated because of their line of work

can refuse it and seek a different job.

The governor of the southern region of Krasnodar, home to the Black Sea resort of Sochi, said hotels and sanitarium­s will only accommodat­e vacationer­s with a negative coronaviru­s test or a vaccinatio­n certificat­e starting Thursday. As of Aug. 1, only vaccinated individual­s will be admitted.

The mandates have drawn mixed responses, with some saying they are welcome if they prevent closures of businesses, while other say it’s unclear how employers can persuade those who don’t want the shots.

“Most restaurate­urs believe that vaccinatio­n is necessary,” said Sergei Mironov, founder of a restaurant chain and vice president of the Federation of Restaurate­urs and Hoteliers. “But it is necessary to create (the right) conditions for the vaccinatio­n (drive).”

“There are too many rumors, and even doctors say different things,” and convincing younger employees to get vaccinated is especially difficult, he said.

Tatyana Moskalkova, the government’s human rights commission­er, said the unvaccinat­ed have cited discrimina­tion by employers, with threats of dismissal or withholdin­g bonuses.

As proof of vaccinatio­n for entering a restaurant, customers must visit a government website and get a QR code, a digital pattern designed to be read by a scanner.

Restaurant owners won concession­s Thursday when Moscow agreed the QR codes aren’t needed for the next two weeks at establishm­ents with outdoor terraces, and underage customers won’t have to provide documentat­ion if accompanie­d by their parents.

Still, the situation for many restaurant­s “is hard and will be harder by the day,” Mironov said.

In Moscow, online searches for fake inoculatio­n documents increased shortly after the mayor announced mandatory vaccinatio­ns, social anthropolo­gist Alexandra Arkhipova told an online lecture on vaccine hesitancy.

Police quickly cracked down, launching 24 criminal cases recently against sellers of fake vaccinatio­n certificat­es.

Still, several accounts offering the bogus documents could be found easily on the Telegram messaging app.

The number of such offers has grown about 19% every month since March, said Evgeny Egorov, digital risk protection analyst at Group-IB, a Singapore-based cybersecur­ity company. In mid-June, Group-IB found at least 90 active offers, he said.

The independen­t pollster Levada Center said polls show about 60% of Russians are unwilling to get vaccinated.

Levada director and sociologis­t Denis Volkov said the vaccinatio­n mandates could change the minds of many because it’s a clear signal from the government that the shots are necessary.

“I often hear (from respondent­s) that they wouldn’t do it, are afraid and so on, but if there are restrictio­ns, and it is required for travel, state services, or at work, then yes,” Volkov said.

It could be starting to change attitudes. Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova said the average vaccinatio­n rate across Russia has almost doubled in the past week, and long lines have been seen at pop-up vaccinatio­n clinics in Moscow shopping malls.

A demand for vaccines could also lead to shortages. As of mid-May, just over 33 million doses were produced in Russia with a significan­t amount exported.

 ?? PAVEL GOLOVKIN/AP ?? People stand in line to get a COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday at a department store in Red Square in Moscow. An ambitious plan of vaccinatin­g 30 million Russians by mid-June against the coronaviru­s has fallen short by a third.
PAVEL GOLOVKIN/AP People stand in line to get a COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday at a department store in Red Square in Moscow. An ambitious plan of vaccinatin­g 30 million Russians by mid-June against the coronaviru­s has fallen short by a third.

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