Kuwait Times

Moscow announces car raffle to boost vaccinatio­n drive

-

MOSCOW: Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin said yesterday that residents of the Russian capital who get their first coronaviru­s jab will now take part in a lottery to win a car.

The move comes as authoritie­s seek to speed up Russia’s vaccinatio­n drive that has stagnated while new infections in Moscow and across the country are on the rise. “From June 14 until July 11, 2021, citizens who get their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine will become participan­ts in a car lottery,” Sobyanin announced on his website. Every week five cars will be raffled out, each worth around 1 million rubles ($13,900).

“But of course the main gain for those who get vaccinated cannot be compared to any car-it is their own health and peace of mind,” Sobyanin said. The mayor-who was vaccinated with Russia’s Sputnik V in May last yearadded that two days ago he got a booster jab and “feels well”.

Sobyanin sounded the alarm over the spike in cases earlier this week and announced the reopening of field hospitals and introduced a “non-working” week until June 20.

All non-essential workers will be out of office but will retain their salary. However, they have not been ordered to stay at home. The mayor also reintroduc­ed a curfew for bars and restaurant­s that bans them from serving customers between 11:00 pm and 6:00 am. A government tally reported 7,704 new virus cases in Moscow yesterday, a sixmonth high.

Despite introducin­g a strict lockdown after the pandemic swept across Russia last spring, authoritie­s lifted most restrictio­ns by mid-summer in an effort to protect the struggling economy. Russia started its mass vaccinatio­n campaign in December, with the homegrown vaccine Sputnik V-touted by Russian President Vladimir Putin as the best in the world-that is free and widely available in Moscow. Since the registrati­on of Sputnik V in August, Russia has approved three more vaccines for public useEpiVacC­orona, CoviVac and the one-dose Sputnik Light.

Foreign-made vaccines are not available in Russia. So far, 18 million people or 12 percent of the population has received at least one dose of a vaccine with polls showing that a majority of Russians do not plan to get immunised. The Kremlin said Putin was vaccinated against the coronaviru­s in private but did not reveal which jab he used. —AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait