Dayton Daily News

Moscow targets Chinese with raids amid virus fears

- By Daria Litvinova and Francesca Ebel

— Bus drivers in Moscow kept their WhatsApp group chat buzzing with questions this week about what to do if they spotted passengers who might be from China riding with them in the Russian capital.

“Some Asian-looking (people) have just got on. Probably Chinese. Should I call (the police)?” one driver messaged his peers. “How do I figure out if they’re Chinese? Should I ask them?” a colleague wondered.

The befuddleme­nt reflected in screenshot­s of the group exchanges seen by The Associated Press had a common source - instructio­ns from Moscow’s public transit operator Wednesday for drivers to call a dispatcher if Chinese nationals boarded their buses, Russian media reported.

A leaked email that the media reports said was sent by the state-owned transporta­tion company Mosgortran­s told dispatcher­s who took such calls to notify the police. The email, which the company immediatel­y described on Twitter as fake, carried a one-word subject line: coronaviru­s.

Since the outbreak of the new virus that has infected more than 76,000 people and killed more than 2,300 in mainland China, Russia has reported two cases. Both patients, Chinese nationals hospitaliz­ed in Siberia, recovered quickly. Russian authoritie­s neverthele­ss are going to significan­t — some argue discrimina­tory — lengths to keep the virus from resurfacin­g and spreading.

Moscow officials ordered police raids of hotels, dormitorie­s, apartment buildings and businesses to track down the shrinking number of Chinese people remaining in the city. They also authorized the use of facial recognitio­n technology to find those suspected of evading a 14-day self-quarantine period upon their arrival in Russia.

“Conducting raids is an unpleasant task, but it is necessary, for the potential carriers of the virus as well,” Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said in a statement.

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/AP ?? A surveillan­ce camera, top left, is seen as people walk through a Moscow Metro (subway) station. Metro workers were instructed to stop passengers from China and ask them to fill out a questionna­ire.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/AP A surveillan­ce camera, top left, is seen as people walk through a Moscow Metro (subway) station. Metro workers were instructed to stop passengers from China and ask them to fill out a questionna­ire.

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