Gulf Times

Moscow permits system goes live

- Reuters

Moscow introduced a travel permit system yesterday to help it police a lockdown meant to slow the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, a move that initially created traffic jams and long queues of people wanting to use the metro.

The system’s introducti­on coincided with a record daily rise of 3,388 in the number of confirmed Russian cases of the virus, taking the nationwide tally to 24,490.

The coronaviru­s response centre said 198 people had died, an overnight rise of 28.

Moscow, the worst-hit region, has imposed a city-wide lockdown, ordering its 12.7mn residents not to leave home except to buy food, get urgent medical treatment, walk the dog or go to work if absolutely vital and their business is open.

Any Moscow resident travelling by car or public transport had to show a permit containing a number code or a machinerea­dable “QR” barcode to justify their travel.

In the morning, photograph­s circulatin­g on social media showed queues of hundreds of people standing close to one another in masks as they tried to enter the city’s metro stations.

Kremlin critics said the crowds had created hundreds of points for the virus to spread among doctors, couriers and other people working in important jobs that bring them into direct contact with other people.

“They’ve just reduced to zero everything (i.e. self-isolation) we spent the last three weeks doing,” opposition politician Alexei Navalny wrote on social media.

One doctor told Reuters that she and several of her colleagues were 40 minutes late for their hospital shifts because of the queues.

Sergei Sobyanin, Moscow’s mayor, wrote on social media that the queues had been caused by officers checking permits.

He asked police to prevent such crowds forming in future.

“The queues have been eliminated. Work has been normalised. But in future it will be necessary to move on to automated control. We’ll think about how to do this,” Sobyanin wrote.

Traffic police have also set up checkpoint­s on roads coming in and out of the Russian capital and said they will not let anyone pass without a permit.

There were reports of large traffic jams forming as a result.

The Kremlin said the crowding had been “bad, dangerous and undesirabl­e”, but that city authoritie­s were working to fix the issue and that it would be wrong to jump to conclusion­s about the permit system immediatel­y after its introducti­on.

“It’s the first morning, it’s a gigantic city, not everything is going to go completely smoothly,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

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