Russia has confirmed 4,234,720 cases of coronavirus and 85,743 deaths.
Feb. 27: What you need to know today
- Russia on Saturday confirmed 11,534 new coronavirus cases and 439 deaths.
- Around 4 million Russians have been vaccinated against the coronavirus so far, state-run TASS news agency reported Friday citing Russia’s Health Ministery representative.
- Guatemala became the latest country to authorize Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the jab’s developers announced Thursday.
- The Egyptian Drug Authority gave emergency authorization to Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the jab’s developers confirmed Wednesday.
- Georgia will be open to Russian tourists from March 1, Russia’s TASS news agency reported Wednesday citing Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili. All tourists arriving in Georgia will be required to present a negative coronavirus test result or vaccination certificate.
Feb. 23
— Kyrgyzstan has registered Sputnik V, the country’s health ministry said Tuesday.
Feb. 22
— Syria has authorized the use of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, its embassy in Moscow said Monday.
Feb. 21
— Montenegro started using Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine in its coronavirus vaccination drive, Russia’s state-run TASS news agency reported Sunday.
— Russia started administering the coronavirus vaccine to the homeless on Sunday. At least 40 people housed by Russia’s Nochlezhka non-governmental organization in St. Petersburg have already received the jab.
Feb. 20
— Ghana’s Ministry of Health has authorized Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, The Russian Direct Investment Fund announced Saturday.
— Moscow announced it had registered its third vaccine against the coronavirus and promised to introduce the jab to the Russian population by March.
Feb. 19
— San Marino became the latest country to authorize Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the shot’s developers announced Friday.
Feb. 17
— 1,000 Sputnik V vaccine doses donated by Russia will be delivered to Gaza Strip on Wednesday, Israel’s defense ministry told AFP. The doses will be administered to frontline healthcare workers.
— Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine has been certified and approved for mass use in Uzbekistan, Uzbekistan’s state coronavirus commission announced Wednesday.
Feb. 16
— Foreign students in Russia will be allowed to return for the spring semester if they fly from countries that have resumed flights with Russia, Russia’s consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said Tuesday. All returning students will be required to show two negative coronavirus tests.
— Kazakhstan’s Karaganda Pharmaceutical Complex received government authorization to make Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the company announced Tuesday. Kazakhstan will be the first country in the world to locally produce Russia’s Sputnik V jab.
— Russia has extended its suspension of flights with Britain through March 16.
— Muslim Spiritual Board of Russia’s republic of Tatarstan announced Tuesday that Muslims are allowed to get vaccinated against the coronavirus “regardless of components” used in the jab.
Feb. 12
— Russia has given preliminary approval for its Covid-19 Sputnik V vaccine to be manufactured in Serbia, a minister said on Friday.
— Health workers in Bosnia received the first dose of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, Reuters reported Friday.
— Montenegro, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and Kazakhstan have authorized Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the shot’s developers announced Friday. Russia’s coronavirus jab has been approved by a total of 27 countries.
Feb.11
— Hungary started using Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine in its coronavirus vaccination drive, Russia’s state-run TASS news agency reported Thursday citing Hungarian Minister Gergely Gulyas.
— Head of republic of Udmurtia has reversed an earlier decision to lift the mask-requirement in the region, according to a decree published on a government website Thursday.
Feb. 10
— Bahrain’s National Health Regulatory Authority gave emergency authorization to Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, The Russian Direct Investment Fund confirmed Wednesday.
— The republic of Chechnya has lifted the requirement to wear face masks in public places, its head Ramzan Kadyrov said Wednesday. All restrictions on inbound travel to the region have been lifted as well.
Feb. 9
— The republic of Udmurtia in Russia’s Central Volga District will lift the mask-wearing requirement from Feb. 12, Governor Alexandr Brechalov announced Tuesday.
— Russia recorded a 19.6% year-on-year increase in deaths last year, figures published by the federal statistics service showed Monday. Excess deaths since the start of the pandemic stood at 337,000 by the end of December.
— Pakistan’s Drug Regulatory Authority has authorized Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, The Russian Direct Investment Fund announced Tuesday. A total of 22 countries have already registered Russia’s jab.
— The European Union has approved Russia’s application to register its Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine in the bloc, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported Tuesday.
— Human trials of a coronavirus vaccine combining Russia’s Sputnik V jab and a shot developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University will begin in Azerbaijan later this month, The Russian Direct Investment Fun announced Tuesday. The clinical trial is expected to take up to six months and will be carried out across five other countries, including the UAE and Saudi Arabia.
Feb. 8
— Restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus in Russia will remain in place until the number of vaccinated residents surpasses 68.6 million people, Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova said Monday.
— The Ukrainian government Monday has passed a resolution banning the registration of coronavirus vaccines produced by Russia.
Feb. 7
— Hungarian health authorities have approved Russia’s coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V, the government said Sunday.
— Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said Sunday he was open to Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine or Chinese alternatives being produced in his country, if they are authorized in the European Union.
Feb. 5
— All university students in Moscow will return to in-person classes starting Feb. 8, according to a Moscow Mayor’s Office decree cited by Interfax Friday.
Feb. 3
— Nicaragua has registered Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, The Russian Direct Investment Fund announced Wednesday. A total of six Latin American states have approved the use of Russia’s jab.
— Russia will resume flights with Armenia and Azerbaijan starting Feb. 15, according to a government decree issued Wednesday. Train connections to and from Belarussian capital Minsk will resume from Feb. 8.
Feb. 2
— Mexico’s Cofepris regulatory agency gave emergency authorization to Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, Mexico’s deputy health minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell announced Tuesday.
— Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine is 91.6% effective against symptomatic Covid-19, according to final-stage clinical trials results published in the medical journal The Lancet on Tuesday.
Feb. 1
— Deputy Chairman of the Security Council Dmitry Medvedev got vaccinated against the coronavirus two months ago, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency quoted Medvedev as saying. Russia’s former Prime Minister did not disclose which Russian vaccine he has received “as not to make it seem that one of the vaccines is better than others.”
— Russia has extended its suspension of flights with Britain through Feb. 16, the RBC news website reported Monday, citing Russia’s coronavirus response center.
Jan. 30
— Iran will receive the first batch of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine on Feb. 4, Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency reported Saturday citing Iran’s ambassador to Russia. Two more batches of the vaccine are to be delivered by Feb. 18 and 28.
Jan. 29
— More than half of Moscow’s 12 million residents have been infected with the coronavirus, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said Friday in an interview with the Rossiya-1 television channel. The number was based on city hall “analysis and research,” he added. It would be more than six times the 925,000 official cases registered in the capital since the start of the pandemic. He added that less than 1% of recorded cases were reinfections.
— All Russian universities will be allowed to resume in-person classes starting Feb. 8, according to the decree issued by Russia’s Ministry of Science and Higher Education Friday.
Jan. 28
— Russia resumed flights with Finland, India, Qatar and Vietnam on Jan. 27 and will resume flights with Greece and Singapore from Feb. 8, the state-run Interfax news agency reported Thursday.
Jan. 27
— Moscow has lifted some measures aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus as cases continued to recede over the past week, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Wednesday. The measures include the requirement for 30% of all businesses’ employees to work remotely and restaurant curfews.
Jan. 26
— Russian authorities on Tuesday said mass production of its second coronavirus vaccine would begin next month and that a third homemade jab is currently in registration.
— The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) will supply Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine to Malaysia, the state-run TASS news agency reported Tuesday citing Russian ambassador to Malaysia Nail Latypov.
— Iranian health regulators have approved Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine for domestic use, Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif announced Tuesday. Iran is yet to secure a deal to buy or domestically produce Russia’s jab.
Jan. 25
— Mexico agreed on Monday to acquire 24 million doses of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said after talking with President Vladimir Putin by telephone.
Jan. 22
—Moscow’s museums, exhibitions, libraries and cultural centers re-opened to visitors, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced. New regulations also allow for cinemas, theaters and concert halls to fill up to 50% of seats.
— Hungary said on Friday it had reached a deal to buy large quantities of Russia’s Sputnik V virus vaccine, even though it has not been approved by the European Union.
Jan. 21
— The UAE’s Health Ministry has given emergency authorization to Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the shot’s developers confirmed Thursday. The UAE is the first Middle East nation to use Russia’s jab in a mass vaccination drive.
Jan. 20
— Hungary’s National Institute of Pharmacy and Nutrition (OGYÉI) gave a six-month authorization to Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, OGYÉI director-general Mátyás Szentiványi announced Wednesday. Hungary is set to become the first EU member to use Sputnik V for large-scale inoculation.
— The Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) has applied for authorization of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine in the European Union, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported Wednesday. The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has concluded a scientific opinion procedure for the vaccine developers on Jan. 19 and is due to begin the formal approval process in February.
Jan. 18
— The republic of Bashkortostan is set to become the first region to introduce immunity passports for residents with Covid-19 antibodies starting February, Bashkortostan Governor Radiy Khabirov announced Monday.
— Turkmenistan became the first Central Asian republic to register Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the Russian Direct Investment Fund announced Monday.
Jan. 17
— Brazil’s state health regulator refuted emergency registration of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine citing questionable phase three trial data results and manufacturing issues, Reuters reported Sunday.
Jan. 15
— Russia’s Sputnik V and EpiVacCorona coronavirus vaccines are not available or in short supply in 42 of the country’s regions, a report from the Peterburgskaya Politica think tank suggests. Health care experts interviewed by The Moscow Times named transportation and production problems among the key logistical issues impeding Russia’s mass vaccination campaign.
— Bolivian President Luis Arce will take the Russian Sputnik V vaccine as the country plans to immunize 2.6 million people with the Russian-developed vaccine, Reuters reported.
— Russia could be overstating its national vaccination tally by as much as five fold, figures analyzed by independent statisticians and The Moscow Times suggest.
— 60% of Russians are unwilling to take the coronavirus vaccine compared with 40% willing to vaccinate, according to a survey by The Superjob.ru job board cited by the RBC news website
Jan. 14
— Life in the Russian capital could return to normal by May, as long as people get vaccinated, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said Thursday. Moscow has vaccinated around 140,000 so far, he added.
— Private clinics in Russia won’t be allowed to administer paid vaccination with the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine prior to its official registration in the country, representative of Russia’s health watchdog Roszdravnadzor told state-run Interfax agency Thursday. The ban covers clinics operating under a special legal regime, including the Skolkovo medical network.
— Moscow has extended restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus until Jan. 21, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Thursday. All Moscow schoolchildren will be able to return to in-person classes next Monday.
Jan. 13
— President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday tasked officials with launching mass coronavirus vaccinations from next week, touting Russia’s homemade jab as the world’s best.
— Maxut Shadaev, Russia’s minister of digital development, communications and mass media, has the coronavirus, making him the latest cabinet member to catch the virus, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko said.
Jan. 12
— Russia has extended its suspension of flights with Britain through Feb. 1 due to Britain’s surge in new infections linked to a new strain of Covid-19 believed to be more infectious.
— A private Moscow clinic is in “direct negotiations” to bring the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine to Russia before it receives official registration, a clinic representative told The Moscow Times on Tuesday, with first deliveries arriving as early as February.
— Russia’s cosmonaut training center said it has begun vaccinating employees against the coronavirus ahead of future space missions. The press service of the Yuri Gagarin Training Center told AFP that around 40 of its nearly 1,500 employees had received the first dose of Russia’s homemade coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V, including the next two Russian cosmonauts scheduled to launch in April.
Jan. 11
— Russia announced Monday that 1.5 million people around the world had received its Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine but did not offer a breakdown of where the jab was distributed.
— St. Petersburg’s museums and the Leningrad Zoo will reopen Monday after being ordered to close for 12 days over the New Year holiday due to rising coronavirus infections. Exhibitions and concerts as well as tourist bus trips will also be permitted to resume.
Jan. 5
— Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed by phone the potential for joint production of a coronavirus vaccine, the Kremlin said.
Jan. 4
— Serbia is expected to begin administering 2,400 doses of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine over the course of the week starting Jan. 5, Serbian health officials said according to TASS.
Dec. 31
— Hungary will not purchase the Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine for large-scale inoculation due to Russia’s lack of production capacity, Reuters quoted Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s chief of staff as saying.
— Algeria will begin rolling out the Sputnik V Covid-19 vaccine developed by Russia in January, the government said. Authorities will receive an initial shipment of 500,000 doses.
Dec. 29
— Russia recorded almost 230,000 excess deaths since the start of the pandemic, new official statistics showed. November 2020 was the deadliest month for at least 16 years.
— Russians who have received the coronavirus vaccine will be provided with immunity passports, Health Minister Mikhail Murashko announced. Digital documents will be available on the government portal Gosuslugi.ru starting Jan. 2021.
Dec. 28
— Russia has extended its suspension of flights with Britain through Jan. 12, 2021.
— Hungary said it received 6,000 doses of Russia’s coronavirus vaccine Monday. The consignment was taken to Budapest for a decision by Hungarian experts on how to use it, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said in a Facebook video message, without providing details on the vaccine’s potential rollout.
— More than half of Russians say they are not ready to receive the coronavirus vaccine, according to the results of an independent Levada Center poll published Monday. Most respondents reluctant to vaccinate said they would do so only after the final clinical trial of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine is published. 57% of Russians fear being infected by the coronavirus, the same poll suggests.
Dec. 27
— President Vladimir Putin will receive Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine “in the foreseeable future,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Sunday. The statement followed an earlier announcement by Health Minister Mikhail Murashko, who confirmed that the vaccine could be used for patients aged 60 and older.
— Moscow residents aged 60 and older will be eligible to receive the Sputnik V jab starting Dec. 28, Moscow Mayor’s press office announced Monday.
Dec. 24
— Moscow residents working in law enforcement, urban planning, sports and the catering industry will be eligible to receive Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine starting Dec. 28, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Thursday. Social service volunteers and employees of NGOs and religious organizations will also be eligible to get the shot. Moscow’s vaccination campaign will continue during the New Year holiday.
Dec. 23
— Argentina gave “emergency” authorization to Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, becoming the first Latin American country to do so. The first 300,000 doses of the vaccine are set to reach the country this week.
Dec. 21
— Russia will halt all flights with Britain for one week, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported. The ban was introduced amid concerns of a more-infectious coronavirus strain found there and will come in effect from midnight Tuesday.
— Belarus became the first country to register Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, Belarus state-run BELTA news agency reported Monday.
Dec. 20
— St. Petersburg hospitals had just 27 beds for coronavirus patients, or 0.5% of total capacity, available early Sunday as the city became Russia’s most-infected locale during the second wave of the pandemic.
— Russia’s conditional mortality rates increased to 1.79%, according to the data from the operational headquarters for the fight against coronavirus.
Dec.18
— St. Petersburg-based Greenpeace energy campaigner Rashid Alimov, 40, died from coronavirus complications, journalist Alexandra Garmazhapova confirmed Friday.
Dec. 17
— President Vladimir Putin, 68, will receive the Sputnik V coronavirus jab once it is approved for people his age, he announced at his annual end-of-year press conference.
— Mayor of the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv Hennadiy Kernes, 61, died from the coronavirus, his close friend businessmen Pavel Fuks confirmed Thursday. Kernes contracted the virus in September and was transported to Berlin’s Charite hospital after developing serious complications.
— Moscow residents working in the industrial sector and transportation as well as journalists will be eligible to receive Russia’s Sputnik V shot starting Monday, the state-run TASS news agency reported Thursday citing Mayor Sergei Sobyanin.
Dec. 16
— The number of coronavirus tests carried out in Russia fell by 825,000 (11%) in the first two weeks of December compared to the first two weeks of November, Reuters reported Wednesday citing its own calculations of official figures.
Dec. 15
— Moscow-based foreign nationals including doctors and educators with valid passports, certificates of employment and public health insurance can sign up to receive the Sputnik V vaccine, a representative from the Moscow Health Department told The Moscow Times Tuesday.
— Aeroflot will allocate special seating for passengers who refuse to wear face masks on flights, a spokeswoman for Russia’s flagship carrier said Tuesday.
Dec. 14
— U.S. filmmaker Oliver Stone, 74, said he has received Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine against the coronavirus despite the country’s mass rollout not covering his age group. Experts have warned the vaccine could be harmful for patients aged 60 and older.
Dec. 11
— Moscow municipal workers as well as residents working in the culture and service sectors will be able to receive Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine starting Monday, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced. The new “risk groups” were added to the eligibility list after Moscow was set to receive a new batch of the vaccine.
— Moscow-based “R-Pharm” will become a leading manufacturer of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the state-run Interfax news agency reported Friday citing Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. Working at full capacity, the factory will produce up to 10 million doses a month.
— Russia’s state-run Gamaleya research center will partner with AstraZeneca to test in a clinical trial whether combining their jabs would boost immunity to Covid-19, the British drugmaker announced Friday.
Dec. 10
— Belarusian authorities ordered a ban on the exit of Belarusian nationals and permanent residents from the country amid a growing number of coronavirus cases, according to the decree published Thursday. The ban will be in force from 20 December and does not apply to passengers using air transport.
— All of Russia’s regions will start mass vaccination against the coronavirus by the end of this week, Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova confirmed Thursday.
— Russia recorded more deaths in October than in any single month for more than a decade, official statistics published Thursday showed. Russia’s federal statistics agency (Rosstat) said 22,761 people with coronavirus died during the month, while the number of deaths was more than 47,000 — or 30% — higher than in 2019.
Dec. 9
— Recipients of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine should abstain from alcohol for three days after each injection, the state-run TASS news agency reported citing the head of the Gamaleya Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology. The statement follows recommendations issued by the Rospotrebnadzor head Anna Popova who advised recipients to avoid alcohol and immunosuppressants for 42 days.
— Russian Communist Party members distributed anti-vaccination leaflets in Moscow, the Podyom Telegram news channel reported Wednesday. The leaflets called Covid-19 vaccination the “rebirth of fascism” and equated the jab to weapons of mass destruction.
Dec. 8
— At least seven hospitals in Moscow and the surrounding Moscow region administer Sputnik V without giving priority to health, education and social workers in contradiction to officials’ orders, the Meduza news website reported Tuesday.
Dec. 7
— Russia’s health minister Mikhail Murashko proposed reinstating a ban on domestic travel to slow the record-breaking spread of the coronavirus outbreak, the state-run TASS news agency reported Monday.
— More than 50% of Russia’s medics have no plans to vaccinate against the coronavirus, according to the result of the Russian Federation Medics Network poll published by VTimes Monday. Over 21% percent of respondents said they prefer to receive a foreign-made vaccine instead of Russia’s homegrown jab. Moscow’s medics interviewed by The Moscow Times also expressed reluctance — or outright refusal — to take a vaccine that has not yet passed sufficient trials for international clinical approval.
Dec. 5
— The maximum price of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine will be set at 1,942 rubles ($26), the state-run Interfax news agency reported Saturday, citing a top health official. Russian citizens will be able to receive the homegrown vaccine for free.
— Russia’s mass vaccination against the coronavirus began in Moscow, authorities said Saturday. Residents belonging to at-risk groups can receive Russia’s homegrown Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine at 70 state-run clinics across the capital.
Dec. 4
— Moscow’s teachers, doctors and social workers are signing up at a rate of 1,000 per hour for the Russian capital’s coronavirus vaccination drive that kicks off Saturday, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced.
— Kazakhstan will start producing Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine from Dec. 22, the country’s President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said Friday.
Dec. 3
— Moscow will start vaccinating at-risk groups against the coronavirus this weekend, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Thursday. Online booking for health workers, teachers and social service workers deemed at higher risk of severe infection will open Friday.
— Russia’s national tour operators expect mass cancellations of tours to St. Petersburg after local authorities announced the reinstatement of coronavirus prevention measures during the New Year holiday and called on tourists to postpone visits to the city.
— Ukraine won’t be purchasing Russia’s coronavirus vaccine due to its questionable efficacy, Ukraine’s Health Minister Maksym Stepanov told Ukraine 24 TV channel Thursday. “As for the Russian vaccine, I have said multiple times that it does not exist,” he said. “There is no point in discussing it because they already registered a vaccine that is yet to go through the [most important] phase three trials.”
Dec. 2
— Russia’s food retailers have a legal right to refuse service to customers without face masks and gloves, the state-run TASS news agency reported Wednesday, citing a recent Supreme Court decision.
— Russia’s Accounts Chamber Chairman and famed liberal economist Alexei Kudrin was diagnosed with coronavirus, said the message published on his social media Wednesday.
— St. Petersburg authorities have ordered the city’s cafes, restaurants, museums, theaters and concert halls to shut down in the period from Dec. 30 until Jan. 10. The city’s water parks, aquariums, shopping malls, museums, exhibitions, theaters and performing arts organizations will close their doors to visitors starting Friday. All indoor and outdoor events featuring more than 50 people will be suspended as well.
— President Vladimir Putin has ordered the mass vaccination against coronavirus among the Russian population to start late next week, with doctors and teachers first in line to receive the country’s Sputnik V vaccine.
— More than 100,000 Russians at higher risk of severe coronavirus cases have been vaccinated with the domestically made Sputnik V vaccine, Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said at a special session of the UN General Assembly Wednesday.
Nov. 30
— Universities in Moscow and St. Petersburg will switch students to remote learning until early February to prevent the spread of coronavirus, Science and Higher Education Minister Valery Falkov said Monday.
Nov. 27
— Russia’s Vector Institute is preparing to publish the results of a clinical trial of Russia’s second coronavirus vaccine, the state-run TASS news agency reported Friday citing the shot’s developers. Called “EpiVacCorona”, the vaccine is expected to enter civilian circulation in early December.
— Russia’s military has launched a coronavirus vaccine campaign among nearly half a million of its active-duty personnel, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced Friday. Up to 80,000 Russian soldiers are expected to receive Russia’s vaccine by the end of the year.
— Medical students on the front lines of Russia’s coronavirus response will receive $260 in payouts, news agencies quoted Deputy Prime Minister Tatiana Golikova as saying Friday.
— Indian pharmaceutical company Hetero will produce 100 million doses of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine as part of the agreement with the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), its developers announced Friday.
Nov. 26
— Moscow has further extended measures aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus until Jan. 15, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Thursday. The measures include a self-isolation order for residents aged 65 and older and the requirement for 30% of all businesses’ employees to work remotely.
— Almost one in every three Russian lawmakers has contracted the coronavirus, Russia’s state-run TASS news agency cited Vyacheslav Volodin, the speaker of Russia’s lower house of parliament as saying Thursday. A total of 137 of the 450 state duma deputies have fallen ill since the start of the pandemic, with 21 currently being treated for Covid-19 in hospital, Volodin said. Forty-six contracted the coronavirus over the last month.
— A Russian airline has canceled a Moscow-Zhengzhou flight after nearly 200 passengers provided identical negative coronavirus test results, the Chinese Embassy in Moscow announced Thursday. Neither the airline nor the organization that conducted the test “could provide a reasonable explanation for the exact same test results.”
— Moscow reported a 300% month-on-month increase in coronavirus deaths for October, the Russian capital’s health department announced late Thursday. Coronavirus was the main cause in 2,235 deaths reported that month.
Nov. 25
— Coronavirus patients in the Altai region have been placed in a dilapidated, out-of-use hospital building due to severe bed shortages, regional health officials announced Wednesday. The region with a population of 2.3 million has confirmed more than 25,000 coronavirus cases and over 1,000 deaths.
Nov. 24
— Russia will start its mass vaccination campaign against the coronavirus in 2021, Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova said. Developers plan to produce 2 million doses of the Russian Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine by the end of this year.
— A contact-tracing app developed by the Ministry of Digital Development is now available on App Store and Google Play. The app, called Gosuslugi.COVID Treker, alerts users of possible exposure to the coronavirus using the Exposure Notification system developed by Apple and Google. Installation of the app remains voluntary.
— Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine is 95% effective, its developers said Tuesday. The calculations were based on preliminary data obtained 42 days after volunteers received the first dose, the Health Ministry, the state-run Gamaleya research center and the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) said in a joint statement.
Nov. 20
— The first samples of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine arrived in Hungary, its developers reported Friday. In a move that has drawn criticism from the European Commission, Hungary is set to become the first EU member state to carry out trials and possibly use Russia’s vaccine.
— Residents of Perm and Voronezh are among those most likely to contract coronavirus within Russia, according to the analysis by the research arm of Russia’s dominant lender Sber. Residents of Moscow and St. Petersburg are among those with the lowest risk of getting infected.
Nov. 19
— St. Petersburg will order the closure of all food courts and ice rinks located in shopping malls, while all sporting events will be held without spectators starting Nov. 23, Governor Alexander Beglov announced Thursday. Cinemas, theaters and concert halls will be allowed to fill no more than 25% of seats, according to restrictions taking effect from Dec. 1.
Nov. 18
— A total of 221,000 patients with confirmed coronavirus infections are currently undergoing treatment across Russia’s hospitals and approximately 5,000 of them require mechanical ventilation, Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said Wednesday. Coronavirus patients currently occupy 20% of all intensive care beds in the country.
— The Vladimir region’s governor was medevaced to a private Moscow clinic for coronavirus treatment because he allegedly feared being hospitalized in his home region, anonymous sources reported Tuesday. The governor later explained on social media that he did so out of concern for the region’s residents.
Nov. 17
— Moscow schoolchildren in grades 6-11 will continue to attend classes remotely until Dec. 6, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Tuesday. This is the second extension of the measure that was first introduced in October.
— Lenin’s mausoleum and the Kremlin necropolis will be closed to visitors starting Nov. 17 in order to slow the spread of coronavirus, the Federal Protective Service agency announced.
— A mutated version of the coronavirus strain that causes Covid-19 has been discovered in Siberia, Rospotrebnadzor head Anna Popova said Tuesday. Popova also noted that none of the mutations discovered in Russia so far have been shown to make the virus more contagious or dangerous.
— Russia has developed a smartphone app that alerts users of possible exposure to the coronavirus, the Ministry of Digital Development, Communications and Mass Media announced. The app’s release date is yet to be confirmed.
Nov. 16
— The eastern Siberian republic of Buryatia became the first Russian region to impose a second coronavirus lockdown. Restaurants, malls and other places of mass gathering will be shut down for two weeks starting Monday.
— Russia will transition to freeze-dried doses of its coronavirus vaccine as a workaround to the logistical challenges of transporting liquid doses at controlled temperatures, Reuters reported Monday.
— The Ivanovo region is experiencing a shortage of mortuary cabinets amid a growing number of coronavirus deaths. Regional morgues are overflowing and the coronavirus situation is expected to worsen even further, a regional Health Ministry official said Monday.
Nov. 13
— Hungary is set to become the first EU member state to carry out trials of Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, its authorities said, with the first samples of the jab expected to arrive from Russia by the end of next week.
— South Korea’s GL Rapha biotechnology firm has signed on to produce over 150 million Sputnik V doses per year, the Russian Direct Investment Fund that is bankrolling the vaccine said. Production is expected to begin next month and South Korea-produced doses will be intended for global distribution.
— Russia resumed flights with Ethiopia and the Seychelles, where it said new coronavirus cases did not exceed 1% of the population over the past two weeks.
Nov. 12
— Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has been hospitalized with coronavirus, his press secretary confirmed Thursday, saying his symptoms are mild and he continues to work from the hospital.
— Russia’s flagship air carrier Aeroflot will resume flights with Cyprus starting Nov. 22, the Russian Embassy in Nicosia said. The flights will not immediately be open to Russian tourists.
— President Vladimir Putin asked his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron for France’s help in producing a coronavirus vaccine in a Nov. 7 phone call, French media reported.
Nov. 11
— Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine is 92% effective, its developers said, citing interim data from the jab’s Phase 3 trials.
— About one in three, or 31%, of coronavirus infections in Russia are asymptomatic, Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova said.
Nov. 10
— Moscow will order all bars, restaurants, clubs and other nighttime establishments to close between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. in order to slow the spread of coronavirus. The order will be valid from Nov. 13 through Jan. 15, 2021, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced.
— Students at city universities and colleges in Moscow will be switched to remote learning, Sobyanin said.
— At least three medics in Siberia who received the Sputnik V vaccine have contracted the coronavirus as part of a vaccination drive of at-risk groups, regional authorities said Tuesday.
Nov. 9
— Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine is more than 90% effective, Reuters cited a Health Ministry representative as saying Monday. The percentage is based on data collated from vaccinations of the public rather than from the vaccine’s ongoing Phase 3 trials, Reuters reported.
— Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Monday that he has tested positive for coronavirus, adding that he feels “good” and is continuing to work while self-isolating.
Nov. 7
— Chinese authorities suspended entry for Russians with valid visas and residence permits because of Russia’s spike in coronavirus cases, the Chinese Embassy in Moscow announced Thursday.
— Russia has recorded almost 120,000 excess deaths since the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, analysis of official statistics on fatalities published Friday revealed. Meanwhile, Russia’s federal statistics service (Rosstat) said a total of 9,798 people with Covid-19 died during September, the latest month for which figures are available. This was up from the 7,463 seen in August, which marked a lull in the number of reported infections across the country.
Nov. 5
— Moscow schoolchildren in grades 6-11 will continue to attend classes remotely until November 22, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Thursday. The measure was first introduced three weeks ago and, according to Sobyanin, has proven to be effective in slowing the spread of coronavirus.
— Sobyanin also noted that the coronavirus outbreak is “worsening” in Moscow despite the containment measures in place.
— Up to 40% of Covid-19 tests performed in Russia could be “false negatives” due to the sample collection errors, the state-run Interfax agency reported citing Russia’s chief pulmonologist Sergei Avdeev.
— The vice-governor of St Petersburg Oleg Ergashev said that coronavirus hospitalization rates in the city have reached 600 people per day, leaving available only 9% of all hospital beds allocated for coronavirus patients.
Nov. 4
— Russia is set to miss the self-imposed coronavirus vaccination timeline, information obtained by the business news website The Bell suggests. While the authorities have vowed to vaccinate a sizable part of Russia’s population by the end of 2020, issues faced by developers won’t allow them to produce the required number of vaccine doses by year-end.
Nov. 3
— Hospitals in the Novosibirsk region will stop performing non-urgent medical procedures to allocate more resources for the treatment of Covid-19 patients, the state-run Interfax agency reported Tuesday citing a regional official.
— Russia’s Rospotrebnadzor watchdog believes that most of the country’s “imported” coronavirus cases came from Turkey, the agency’s head Anna Popova said Tuesday.
— About 30% of Russia’s pharmacies don’t have essential coronavirus treatment drugs available for sale, results of the evaluation conducted by the ruling United Russia party suggest.
Nov. 2
— Only 36% of Russians are ready to vaccinate against Covid-19, according to the results of an independent Levada Center poll published by Russia’s Open Media news Monday. The share of Russians unwilling to vaccinate has risen to 59% in October from nearly 54% in August.
— All of Moscow’s McDonald’s restaurants will implement a QR code check-in system for its visitors, the state-run TASS news agency reported Monday citing the company’s press service.
— Head of Russia’s consumer safety watchdog Anna Popova said that the number of new infections is increasing in 33 out of 85 Russian regions with only 19 regions reporting a slow down of the daily case growth.
Nov. 1
— Over 150 patients were evacuated from a coronavirus hospital on Saturday in the Ural city of Chelyabinsk following an oxygen explosion and fire.
— All of Russia’s regions are currently experiencing shortages of doctors to fight the coronavirus, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Friday.
— Russia’s coronavirus vaccine faces equipment shortages that could delay it from entering mass production, President Vladimir Putin said Thursday as reports suggested that developers have paused clinical trials due to the shortages.
— Russia has no plans to introduce nationwide lockdown measures, Putin said, saying “justified, targeted” measures would allow the economy to stay open.
Oct. 28
— Moscow has extended its requirement for 30% of all businesses’ employees to work remotely through Nov. 28, while students from grades 6-11 will continue distance learning through Nov. 8, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
— Deputy Prime Minister Tatyana Golikova said that 80.9% of Russia’s hospital beds for coronavirus patients are currently occupied. Five regions of the country are at over 95% of their bed capacity for coronavirus patients, she added.
Oct. 27
— Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is self-isolating after coming into contact with an individual infected with coronavirus, the state-run TASS news agency cited the Foreign Ministry as saying Tuesday. All of Lavrov’s planned meetings have been postponed but he is reportedly feeling well.
— Russia has reinstated a nationwide mask mandate starting Wednesday and has recommended that restaurants and bars close between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m.
— Bars and clubs in Moscow will stay open past 11 p.m. and will continue to use the QR code check-in system, authorities said.
— A total of 124 employees of the Bolshoi Theater currently have coronavirus, its director Vladimir Urin said at a presidential arts and culture council meeting Tuesday.
Oct. 26
— People with high temperatures will no longer be allowed onto Moscow’s public transportation, the city’s transport department said Monday. Thermal imagers will be installed at entrances to measure passengers’ body temperatures.
— Ninety-one State Duma deputies have contracted the coronavirus, 38 of whom have been hospitalized, State Duma speaker Vyacheslav Volodin told President Vladimir Putin.
— Moscow has opened its fifth reserve hospital for coronavirus patients, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
— Around 85% of Russian volunteers who receive the country’s highly touted coronavirus Sputnik V vaccine report no side effects, according to the shot’s developer.
Oct. 25
— Authorities in the southwestern Siberian city of Novokuznetsk said a shortage of coroners as well as quarantined residents unable to collect their loved ones has resulted in its morgue filling up with dead bodies, including those who had died from the coronavirus.
Oct. 23
— A device that tests for the coronavirus based on the sound of a cough could appear at Russian airports in the next few months, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Oct. 20
— A number of Russian regions risk facing a second wave of the coronavirus pandemic that is 10 times worse than the first, a senior Russian vector-borne disease expert said.
Oct. 19
— Senior Russian healthcare professionals say they expect the country’s number of daily Covid-19 infections to peak at 20,000 before stabilizing within the next two weeks.
— Starting Oct. 19, Muscovites will be required to register their phone numbers before they can enter bars and nightclubs in order to control the spread of coronavirus, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced Thursday. People will be required to scan a QR code or send a text message to a designated number when entering a bar or club after midnight.
— In the surrounding Moscow region, all nighttime entertainment after midnight is banned. Museums, exhibitions and public events including sporting events will be banned in the region from Oct. 21.
— St. Petersburg authorities are reportedly planning to order all restaurants, bars and other establishments to close from midnight to 6 a.m. every day starting Oct. 26.
Oct. 16
— Passengers without face masks and gloves won’t be allowed to enter the Moscow metro starting Friday.
— Russia resumed flights with Serbia and Cuba on Oct. 15 and will resume flights with Japan from Nov. 1, the RBC news website reported, citing Russia’s air transport agency Rosaviatsia.
Oct. 14
— Russia has approved its second coronavirus vaccine, President Vladimir Putin announced as the peptide-based shot developed by a Siberian biotech company readies for large-scale trials.
— Russia plans to resume flights to Japan, Serbia and Cuba starting next month, the country’s coronavirus crisis center announced.
— Russia has cleared two antiviral drugs called remdesivir for coronavirus treatment after doctors used the drugs to treat U.S. President Donald Trump, the Health Ministry announced.
— First-to-fifth graders in Moscow will be able to return to school starting next week, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. Older students will continue to attend classes remotely for at least two more weeks.
Oct. 13
— President Vladimir Putin has ordered the creation of a Security Council commission tasked with creating a nationwide system for preventing the spread of infectious diseases. The commission will be headed by former Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.
— Nearly 96,000 people have been fined in Moscow for violating mask and glove-wearing requirements on public transport since May, a city transport official told the state-run TASS news agency Tuesday.
Oct. 9
— Russia has carried out more than 500,000 coronavirus tests in a single day for the first time since the start of the pandemic, consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said.
Oct. 8
— Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, is self-isolating after coming into contact with a coronavirus-infected individual, the Church announced.
Oct. 5
— Starting Monday, Moscow employers will be required to transfer 30% of their employees to remote work through Oct. 28 due to the city’s coronavirus situation. Workers over the age of 65 and those suffering from chronic diseases will also be required to work remotely. Workers at medical institutions, defense agencies, Rosatom and Roscosmos are exempt from the new rules.
Oct. 3
— Ukraine’s former President Petro Poroshenko has been hospitalized with double pneumonia, his wife said Saturday, days after he tested positive for Covid-19.
Oct. 2
— Moscow could receive bulk shipments of Russia’s coronavirus vaccine by the end of 2020 while the vaccine continues to undergo final clinical trials, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
Sept. 29
— Moscow’s schools will take a two-week vacation from Oct.5-18 in order to slow the city’s rise in coronavirus cases, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced, saying that a large number of asymptomatic cases are among children.
— The State Duma will partially return to remote work to prevent the spread of coronavirus, its speaker Vyacheslav Volodin announced Tuesday.
— Volodin added that eight deputies have been hospitalized with coronavirus in the past week, bringing the total to 18. Overall, 60 State Duma deputies have been infected and recovered from the coronavirus since the start of the pandemic.
Sept. 28
— Around 5,000 volunteers including those who are at higher risk of severe infection have received Russia’s coronavirus vaccine as part of final clinical trials for safety and effectiveness, its developer said.
Sept. 26
— Russia’s coronavirus treatment drug Avifavir will be made available in 17 more countries in addition to the six countries where it is already sold, Russia’s sovereign wealth fund said in a statement Thursday.
— Russia’s second candidate vaccine against the coronavirus is less than a month away from state approval after completing small-scale human trials, the vaccine’s developers said this week.
Sept. 25
— Moscow is urging its businesses to reinstate work-from-home measures and elderly residents to avoid going outside starting next week as the city sees a new uptick in coronavirus cases, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said Friday.
Sept. 24
— Moscow confirmed more than 1,000 coronavirus cases for the first time since June 23.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has reportedly asked Sberbank, Yandex and Rostec to resume remote work for some employees, the RBC news website reported, citing copies of Sobyanin’s letters it obtained.
Sept. 22
— President Vladimir Putin in a speech at the United Nations boasted of Russia’s creation of the world’s first coronavirus vaccine, though it has not completed large-scale clinical trials.
— Russia will share legal liability for unexpected side effects of its Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the head of its sovereign wealth fund told Reuters, a move that could potentially result in costly compensation claims for its developers.
— At least 10 members of Russia’s lower house of parliament are currently hospitalized with coronavirus and more than 50 have developed antibodies, its speaker said.
Sept. 21
— Authorities in China’s eastern Jilin province have discovered traces of coronavirus on packages of frozen squid imported from Russia, China’s state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
— Recruits in Moscow have reported no side effects after taking China’s candidate coronavirus vaccine as part of large-scale clinical trials, the Russian pharmaceutical company working with the vaccine’s Chinese developers announced.
Sept. 19
— Russia said it will resume flights with Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan from Sept. 21 and with South Korea from Sept. 27.
Sept. 18
— Russia said it will resume flights with Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan from Sept. 21 and with South Korea from Sept. 27.
Sept. 16
— Russia will sell 100 million doses of its Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine to India once final trials and regulatory steps are completed, Russia’s sovereign fund that is bankrolling the project announced.
Sept. 11
— Nearly half of Russians say they will never vaccinate against the coronavirus regardless of its country of production, according to a survey cited by the RBC news website.
Sept. 10
— Moscow authorities will no longer require a two-week home quarantine period for people with symptoms of acute respiratory viral infection if the individuals test negative for coronavirus, deputy mayor Anastasia Rakova said.
— The Bolshoi Theater has canceled its Sept. 10 performance of the opera “Don Carlos” after one of its soloists tested positive for the coronavirus. The iconic Moscow theater re-opened to the public for the first time since March on Sept. 6 and had staged two performances of “Don Carlos” so far.
Sept. 9
— Russia has launched Phase 3 trials of its Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine to determine the jab’s long-term safety and effectiveness, authorities said Wednesday. A group of prominent scientists and doctors has questioned the published results of the vaccine’s initial trials.
Sept. 7
— Saudi King Salman and Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed the possible joint production of a Russian coronavirus vaccine, the Kremlin said.
Sept. 5
— Russia recorded more than 30,000 excess deaths in July as the coronavirus pandemic continued to sweep across the country, new data from the country’s statistics service Rosstat has shown.
Sept. 4
— For the first time since Aug. 15, more than 5,000 people were infected with coronavirus in Russia on Friday (5,100) bringing the country’s official number of cases to 1,015,105.
— 121 people died overnight. 17,649 have died since the start of the pandemic.
— Russia has added Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and the Maldives to the list of countries it plans to restart flights with five months after closing its borders due to the coronavirus pandemic.
— Patients involved in early tests of a Russian coronavirus vaccine developed antibodies with “no serious adverse events”, according to research published in The Lancet, but experts said the trials were too small to prove safety and effectiveness.
Sept. 2
— Elderly scientists who helped develop Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine have not reported adverse effects after being injected, the head of the research institute behind the inoculation told the state-run RIA Novosti news agency.
— Russia plans to begin the first mass deliveries of its coronavirus vaccine in September, Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said.
— Greece and Poland have updated their coronavirus travel restrictions to allow Russian citizens to cross their borders for two-week periods as Russia’s virus caseload topped the one million milestone
Sept. 1
— Russia surpassed 1 million cases of Covid-19 nationwide, making it the fourth country after the United States, Brazil and India to reach the milestone.
Aug. 31
— The head of a remote Siberian region has contracted the coronavirus a second time in what may be Russia’s first documented case of reinfection.
Aug. 25
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has taken the Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, the Znak.com news website reported, citing an unnamed source close to the mayor. Sobyanin’s press secretary neither confirmed nor denied the news.
Aug. 21
— Mexico will receive at least 2,000 doses of Russia’s candidate coronavirus vaccine as part of the injection’s Phase 3 clinical trials, Mexico’s foreign minister said.
Aug. 18
— Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak has the coronavirus, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said. He is at least the fifth Russian cabinet member to contract the virus.
Aug. 15
— Russia said that it has produced the first batch of its coronavirus vaccine, after President Vladimir Putin announced it had been first in the world to approve a vaccine.
Aug. 14
— Vietnam’s health ministry is looking to buy a bulk order of Russia’s coronavirus vaccine, state media said, despite global skepticism over its effectiveness and safety.
— More than half of Russian doctors aren’t ready to get the country’s highly touted coronavirus vaccine, according to an online survey of more than 3,000 healthcare professionals obtained by the RBC news website.
Aug. 12
— The Brazilian state of Parana signed a deal to test and produce Russia’s new coronavirus vaccine, though officials stressed they would have to be sure of its safety and effectiveness first.
Aug. 11
— Russia has registered the world’s first coronavirus vaccine, President Vladimir Putin announced amid widespread concerns about the rapidly developed vaccine’s safety.
— The vaccine’s registration certificate on the Health Ministry website notes that the vaccine, an injection solution called “Sputnik-V,” will enter civilian circulation on Jan. 1, 2021.
Aug. 10
— The Association of Clinical Trials Organizations (ACTO) industry body that represents organizations conducting multinational clinical trials in Russia urged for more tests before registering its coronavirus vaccine.
Aug. 8
— Russia’s statistics agency Rosstat said 11,917 people with the coronavirus died in June, compared to an official death toll of 4,880 for the same period. Rosstat said Covid-19 was confirmed or believed to be the main cause of death in 7,037 cases, was a contributing factor in 1,399 cases, but had no influence on the patient’s death in another 3,481 cases.
Aug. 7
— Russia’s flagship airline Aeroflot has canceled flights to 87 international destinations for the rest of August due to the coronavirus situation. The list doesn’t include countries where Russia has already resumed or plans to resume flights: Britain, Turkey, Tanzania and Switzerland.
Aug. 5
— Moscow city government employees and healthcare workers are being offered early access to Russia’s coronavirus vaccine as the country rushes to approve what it says is the world’s first Covid-19 vaccine, Bloomberg reported.
— Moscow’s theaters and concert halls will refuse entry to anyone with a temperature over 37 degrees Celsius or who shows symptoms of respiratory illness, the city’s culture department said.
Aug. 4
— The World Health Organization urged Russia to follow the established guidelines for producing safe and effective vaccines after Moscow announced plans to start swiftly producing COVID-19 jabs.
— Moscow authorities have issued 5,000-ruble fines ($68) to more than 40,000 people for not wearing a mask in the metro since the requirement was first introduced, a city transport official said.
— Russia has begun delivering shipments of its coronavirus treatment drug Avifavir to South Africa, Russia’s sovereign wealth fund said. It will soon begin delivering the drug to seven Latin American countries.
Aug. 3
— Russia said it aims to launch mass production of a coronavirus vaccine next month and turn out “several million” doses per month by next year.
Aug. 1
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said the Russian capital has reached its “minimum” level of 650-700 new coronavirus cases per day. It won’t be possible for the numbers to go much lower as “millions of people move around the city,” he added.
July 31
— Authorities in Moscow have issued sweeping fines for violating face mask and glove requirements in recent weeks as the city looks to enforce coronavirus safety rules, the state-run TASS news agency reported.
July 29
— The head of Russia’s sovereign wealth fund which is funding coronavirus vaccine research called Russia’s race to develop the world’s first coronavirus vaccine “a Sputnik moment,” comparing it to the Soviet Union’s 1957 launch of the world’s first satellite.
— Russia’s coronavirus vaccine could be administered to civilians as soon as Aug. 15, Interfax cited a source at the state-run Gamaleya National Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology as saying. The source said the Health Ministry will likely register the vaccine, which is still undergoing clinical trials, between Aug. 10-12.
July 28
— Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said he was infected with an asymptomatic case of the coronavirus but has since recovered.
— The European Union won’t open its borders to Russian citizens until at least mid-August, the state-run TASS news agency reported, citing a source in one of the EU member states’ delegations. The EU is revising its “white list” of permitted travelers every two weeks.
July 27
— Russian schools across the country will re-open for the new school year on Sept. 1, Education Minister Sergei Kravtsov told the state-run RIA Novosti news agency. “All [coronavirus safety] requirements will be taken into account in order to protect our children and teachers as much as possible,” he said.
July 24
— Russia plans to restart international flights to Britain, Turkey and Tanzania on Aug. 1 more than four months after closing its borders due to the coronavirus pandemic.
July 23
— Russia plans to administer its experimental coronavirus vaccine on healthcare professionals next month before its clinical trials are completed, Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said.
— Russia will waive visa fees for foreigners when the country’s consulates and diplomatic missions reopen abroad, the Foreign Ministry announced.
— Valentina Matviyenko, the head of Russia’s upper house of parliament, said current progress made it possible for the vaccine to enter mass production by the end of 2020. The vaccine’s creator Denis Logunov echoed her claim, telling Meduza that the Gamaleya institute expects to produce around 1 million shots per year by the end of 2020.
July 20
— Russia has come through the coronavirus pandemic with far fewer infections and deaths than many other European countries, President Vladimir Putin said while visiting Moscow-annexed Crimea.
— Members of Russia’s ruling elite have been given access to an experimental coronavirus vaccine as early as April, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed sources.
July 19
— The Russian Defense Ministry said that it has completed the first clinical trials of a potential coronavirus vaccine on human volunteers. The trials showed that “the volunteers had the necessary antibodies to coronavirus and the components of the vaccine are safe and well-tolerated by humans,” a lead military scientist told Interfax.
— British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said he was “absolutely confident” in allegations by the UK and its allies that Russia targeted labs conducting coronavirus research, branding the behavior “outrageous and reprehensible.”
July 17
— It would be impossible for Moscow, a city of more than 12 million, to hide the scale of its coronavirus outbreak because “we have a small town, we all live within a radius of 15 kilometers,” Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. “Everyone knows each other; they can call a friend’s doctor, an ambulance station, a clinic; they can ask friends about who’s sick or not sick.”
July 16
— Russia plans to conduct Phase 3 trials of its experimental coronavirus vaccine in the Middle East as well as at home, the head of Russia’s sovereign fund told Reuters.
— The mayor of Russia’s Arctic city of Norilsk has accused regional authorities of dramatically underreporting coronavirus cases and ignoring the scale of its outbreak, the Tayga.info news website reported.
— Russia called off its annual “Immortal Regiment” commemoration of the nation’s World War II dead in which thousands carry photographs of relatives through the streets due to the coronavirus pandemic.
July 15
— The Russian Defense Ministry said it has developed a “safe” coronavirus vaccine following clinical trials on a group of volunteers.
— Starting July 16, Moscow will offer free coronavirus testing for all residents, deputy mayor Anastasia Rakova said.
— Belarus plans to re-open its border and resume transport connections with neighboring Russia within the next few days, Belarusian Prime Minister Roman Golovchenko said following talks with Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin. Belarus is one of the only countries which refused to impose a coronavirus lockdown.
July 14
— Russia and its international partners will produce than 200 million doses of coronavirus vaccine by the end of 2020, the head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF) has said.
July 13
— Russia will no longer require foreigners without coronavirus to self-isolate for 14 days after arrival as the country looks to begin reopening to international travelers in the midst of the pandemic, according to a decree published Monday.
— A medical university in Moscow says it has completed clinical trials of the world’s first coronavirus vaccine using human volunteers. Scientists said it could be distributed to patients as soon as next month.
July 10
— Russia will begin negotiations with other countries to restart international flights from July 15, deputy prime minister Tatiana Golikova said. Flights will be permitted to a specific list of countries where cases of the coronavirus do not exceed 40 per 100,000 people, where the average daily increase in new cases is no higher than 1%, and where both countries agree to resume air connections.
— In May, 12,452 people with Covid-19 died in Russia, Russia’s state statistics agency Rosstat confirmed Friday. The coronavirus was determined to be the main cause of death in 7,444 cases. Russia counts only the latter in its official coronavirus death toll, which stands at 11,017.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced that wearing masks will no longer be required outdoors from July 13 as the number of new coronavirus cases has dwindled in the Russian capital in recent weeks.
— All beaches in Moscow will be closed due to the coronavirus, Russia’s consumer protection watchdog said. Locals had flocked to beaches along the Moscow River with the arrival of warmer weather.
— The Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg will re-open to visitors on July 15.
July 8
— Migrant workers were almost twice as likely as Russians to lose their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic, new research has found.
July 7
— Around half of Russia’s doctors believe that official statistics undercount the number of coronavirus cases in the country while one in 10 say the numbers are too high, the Vedomosti business newspaper reported.
July 5
— A Moscow election official infected with the coronavirus administered votes during Russia’s weeklong plebiscite on constitutional changes, the Dozhd television channel reported.
July 2
— Former Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev has recovered from the coronavirus two weeks after testing positive, his spokesman said.
July 1
— Russia is not among the 15 countries whose citizens can enter the European Union when it re-opens its borders Wednesday due to Russia’s coronavirus response. Russia could be added later to the EU’s list of “safe countries,” which the bloc will update every two weeks based on the safety situation in each state.
— Russia held a nationwide vote on constitutional reforms despite the coronavirus. The amendments, which were overwhelmingly approved, would allow President Vladimir Putin to extend his rule until 2036 by resetting his term limits.
June 30
— Russian businessman Oleg Tinkov has recovered from the coronavirus, he wrote on his Instagram. He said he had contracted the virus three months ago while being treated for leukemia in Berlin.
— The republic of Chechnya has canceled its two-week quarantine requirement for individuals entering the region, its head Ramzan Kadyrov said at a meeting as quoted by Interfax. People entering the region will still be required to present negative coronavirus test results or to take a test at the border.
June 29
— Russia’s coronavirus lockdown measures, combined with residents’ compliance with these restrictions, have helped prevent about 80,000 deaths from the virus, a study by Moscow’s Higher School of Economics said.
— Russia’s movie theaters will reopen on July 15, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko said at a meeting with Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin. The country’s cinemas had closed in late March due to the coronavirus.
— A second wave of coronavirus could hit major cities in European Russia as soon as two weeks from now, Mikhail Shchelkanov, who heads the Far Eastern Federal University’s school of biomedicine, told Ura.ru. The virus could also hit Russia’s Far Eastern port city of Vladivostok through Chinese citizens returning home from other countries.
— Vladimir Lenin’s tomb on Red Square will reopen to the public on July 1, the Federal Security Service said.
June 28
— President Vladimir Putin gets tested for the coronavirus “every three to four days,” he told the state Rossia 1 broadcaster in an interview that aired Sunday. All of the tests have come back negative, he added.
June 26
— About 20% of Moscow residents have coronavirus immunity, deputy mayor Anastasia Rakova said, citing a new study.
— Moscow isn’t ready to fully re-open its tourism sector, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
— Russia will ease its ban on foreigners imposed due to the coronavirus to allow foreign specialists to enter the country, a government decree says. Specialists who meet the government’s requirements will be allowed a single entry into the country.
June 24
— Russia’s flagship carrier Aeroflot has been secretly flying passengers abroad for nearly a month despite state-mandated grounded flights due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Vedomosti business daily reported.
— Russia held its landmark Victory Day parade on Red Square after it was postponed from May 9 due to the coronavirus. Despite the pandemic, thousands of military personnel took part in the parade, which marks the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory over the Nazis in World War II.
— Kyrgyz President Sooronbay Zheenbekov pulled out of attending the Victory Day parade in person after two members of his delegation tested positive for Covid-19 upon arriving in Moscow.
June 23
— Starting Tuesday, Moscow’s indoor dining, fitness clubs, swimming pools and public sports and recreation facilities will reopen after being closed for months due to the coronavirus.
— Russia’s state statistics agency published higher coronavirus death figures for April than previously reported because it receives more complete data than the national coronavirus crisis center, its chief has said.
— More than one-quarter of Russians know at least one person among their friends, family or aquaintances who has contracted the coronavirus, the RBC news website reported, citing research from Moscow’s Higher School of Economics.
— The Buddhist leader, or Supreme Lama, of the republic of Tyva, a remote region of Russia in southern Siberia, has died of coronavirus, the head of the region said.
June 22
— Most Russian regions will be able to start accepting tourists from other parts of the country starting July 1, Rostourism spokesperson Zarina Doguzova said.
— St. Petersburg has surpassed Moscow as having the country’s highest coronavirus mortality for the first time since the pandemic began. Twenty-nine people have died from coronavirus in St. Petersburg over the past 24 hours compared to 20 people in Moscow.
June 19
— Russia has canceled its high-profile Asia-focused economic forum in the Far East, organizers said.
— Wedding registrations and ceremonies will resume in Moscow starting June 23, Deputy Mayor Anastasia Rakova said, with sanitary and social distancing requirements still in place.
June 18
— Four hundred and eighty-nine doctors in Russia have died from the coronavirus, the head of Russia’s health watchdog said, or 6% of the country’s official death toll. The agency later backtracked, with its press service saying that the figure was “not official” and was based on “data circulating on the internet.”
— Nursultan Nazarbayev, the former president of close Russian ally and former Soviet republic Kazakhstan, has been diagnosed with coronavirus, his spokesperson said.
— Mikhail Ignatyev, the ousted head of the republic of Chuvashia who sued President Vladimir Putin last month over what he said was wrongful dismissal, has died from the coronavirus, Interfax reported, citing a source in the region’s administration. He had reportedly been hospitalized in St. Petersburg with pneumonia in both lungs in critical condition.
— The Russian military has started testing a coronavirus vaccine on 18 volunteers, the Defense Ministry said. On Wednesday, the Health Ministry said its coronavirus vaccine trials had begun with two groups of 38 volunteers.
June 17
— A special disinfection tunnel has been installed at President Vladimir Putin’s residence outside Moscow to protect him from the coronavirus, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported.
— Russian World War II veterans who attend next Wednesday’s Victory Day parade on Red Square won’t be required to wear masks, the head of Russia’s consumer protection watchdog said. Attendees will be spaced apart and all surfaces will be disinfected, Anna Popova said.
— The veterans are self-isolating outside Moscow in order to protect President Vladimir Putin from the coronavirus.
— As of Wednesday, 20 cities had canceled or delayed their Victory Day parades due to the coronavirus.
— The Krasnodar region in southern Russia will begin easing restrictions on tourists starting June 21, including canceling a required two-week quarantine period for arriving tourists.
June 16
— A 103-year-old coronavirus patient in St. Petersburg has recovered from the illness, the hospital where she was treated said. Valentina Martynovna is now at home with family and “feeling well,” the hospital said.
June 15
— Russia’s second-largest city St. Petersburg had the highest coronavirus mortality rate among all Russian cities in the month of April, according to a new analysis of official data.
— Russian officials have urged hotels to ban unmarried couples from checking in as a way to preventing the spread of coronavirus.
— President Vladimir Putin has extended the period in which foreign nationals whose Russian visas expired after March 15 can stay in the country. Foreigners already in Russia will now have their visas automatically extended through Sept. 15.
— Three more Russian cities, Penza, Chelyabinsk and Yakutsk, have canceled plans to hold Victory Day parades on June 24 due to the coronavirus, the Kommersant business daily reported. At least 10 other cities had canceled or postponed the parade last week.
— French President Emmanuel Macron didn’t receive an invitation to Russia’s rescheduled Victory Day parade on June 24 and will not attend as a result, a representative of the Elysee Palace told the state-run RIA Novosti news agency. He was one of the world leaders expected to attend the landmark May 9 military parade on Red Square before it was postponed due to the coronavirus.
June 13
— Russia more than doubled its official coronavirus death toll for April to 2,712 after changing how it classifies fatalities.
June 12
— President Vladimir Putin made his first public appearance after weeks of coronavirus lockdown, saying at a ceremony to mark the Russia Day public holiday that an “absolute majority” of Russians back his controversial plan to change the Constitution.
June 11
— The first batch of Avifavir, the drug Russia approved to treat coronavirus patients, has been delivered to some Russian hospitals.
— At least 10 Russian cities have further postponed a landmark military parade meant to mark the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory in World War II because of coronavirus fears, the Znak.com news website reported.
— The head of the World Health Organization’s emergencies program has questioned Russia’s low coronavirus death rate, saying it is “unusual that the number of deaths relative to the number of confirmed cases is very low.”
— The Kremlin doesn’t view Russia’s coronavirus mortality data as unusual and Rospotrebnadzor is ready to explain its numbers to the WHO, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
— Discrepancies in Russia’s coronavirus mortality data are caused by the fact that Moscow authorities haven’t sent the city’s final numbers to the federal headquarters, the RBC news website reported.
— Russian Railways will resume regular service of its Sapsan high-speed trains between Moscow and St. Petersburg starting June 24.
— More than 17% of Moscow residents have coronavirus antibodies, deputy mayor Anastasia Rakova said.
— Russia’s second-largest city of St. Petersburg has a shortage of hospital beds for coronavirus patients, the Fontanka news website reported as patients decried poor conditions at a hastily built temporary hospital.
June 10
— Almost 60% more people in Moscow have died in May than the city’s average toll for the past three years, the city health department said as questions continue to swirl around Russia’s low coronavirus death figures.
— Russia’s low coronavirus death toll is the result of the country’s “effective” healthcare system, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told CNN. “Have you ever thought about the possibility of Russia’s health care system being more effective?” he said.
June 9
— Moscow ended its self-isolation orders — including its digital pass system and schedule system for taking walks outside — Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. The city has also released a schedule of which restrictions will be lifted over the next few weeks.
— Russia confirmed 8,595 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 485,253.
— The city of Murmansk in Russia’s Arctic has opened a new coronavirus field hospital two weeks after breaking ground on construction.
June 8
— Russia will begin re-opening its borders to foreign nationals, starting with foreigners who need to come to Russia for medical treatment or to take care of their relatives, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said.
— Russia’s tourism sector is ready to begin gradually re-opening, Mishustin said at a video meeting with his deputies.
— Russia plans to resume international air travel on July 15 as it eyes a gradual return to normal life amid the coronavirus pandemic, the RBC news website and state-run TASS news agency reported.
— Russian carrier S7 Airlines plans to resume all domestic flights in June, the company said in a statement Monday.
June 4
— Russia plans to start clinical testing of a coronavirus vaccine on paid volunteers from the general public from next week, the director of the institute in charge of the study told The Moscow Times.
— A U.S. military plane carrying 150 donated ventilators to help coronavirus patients landed in Moscow in the second such delivery to Russia, the U.S. embassy said.
— President Vladimir Putin has ordered the military to set up a field hospital in the Zabaikalsky region he described as the latest coronavirus hotspot.
— Russia’s second-largest city St. Petersburg recorded almost 30% more deaths in May 2020 compared to its average May total over the past decade, official data said.
June 3
— One patient has died following a fire at St. Petersburg’s Botkin infectious diseases hospital, which is being used to treat coronavirus patients, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported.
— Russian hospitals will be able to resume planned medical procedures, according to a decree signed by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin. Hospitals which were converted to treat coronavirus patients may also return to their normal work depending on the coronavirus situation in their region.
June 2
— The Russian military will march asymptomatic troops and those who have developed immunity to coronavirus at its landmark parade marking the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory in World War II later this month, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said.
— Russia’s movie theaters could re-open as early as mid-July, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko said during a government meeting, pointing to the stabilizing coronavirus situation. Theaters and concert halls will start re-opening in the fall, he added.
— Russia’s military said it has recruited dozens of volunteers among its ranks for two-month clinical trials of a coronavirus vaccine set to begin Wednesday.
— Russian scientists are developing a coronavirus treatment involving ultraviolet light brought inside the body, a potentially dangerous method that has been promoted by U.S. President Donald Trump.
— Temporary hospitals erected in Moscow to treat coronavirus patients will remain in operation for at least a year, deputy mayor Anastasia Rakova told state-run television. Five temporary hospitals have been constructed across the city with a total of 10,000 beds, she said.
June 1
— Russia will begin rolling out its first approved drug in the fight against coronavirus which it describes as “a game changer” starting next week, Reuters reported, citing the country’s sovereign wealth fund.
— Russia’s public vote on a set of constitutional amendments that would allow President Vladimir Putin to stay in power through 2036 will take place on July 1, Putin said at a meeting with officials.
— A coronavirus patient who fell from a fifth-floor window at a Moscow hospital on Saturday was a police lieutenant colonel and a senior forensics expert in the Interior Ministry, the RBC news website reported, citing an unnamed Interior Ministry source. The woman survived the fall and is now in intensive care, RBC reported.
— Nikol Pashinyan, the prime minister of Armenia, has contracted the coronavirus, he announced.
May 29
— Russia confirmed 8,572 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 387,623.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has ordered to lift some of Moscow’s coronavirus restrictions starting June 1. All non-food shops and some service sector businesses will be able to re-open, he said. The city will also test lifting restrictions on walks outside using a schedule system for apartment buildings and all parks except for Zaryadye Park will re-open.
— Moscow health authorities have more than doubled the city’s April death count from coronavirus or related cases as questions continue to surround Russia’s comparatively low mortality rate.
— Russian authorities said that a small number of spectators would be allowed at stadiums when the country’s Premier League restarts its suspended season next month.
— Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin added the media sector to the list of industries that qualify for government support during the coronavirus pandemic, entitling publishers and news outlets to tax payment deferrals, interest-free loans for paying employee salaries and more.
May 28
— Russia confirmed 8,371 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 379,051.
— Russia is reissuing invitations to international leaders including French President Emmanuel Macron to attend a massive military parade in Moscow on June 24, a Foreign Ministry official said.
— Moscow’s coronavirus restrictions will be in place until a vaccine is developed, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
— One in four Russians believe that the global coronavirus pandemic is made-up, according to a survey by Moscow’s Higher School of Economics (HSE) cited by the RBC news website.
May 27
— Russia confirmed 8,338 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 370,680.
— Russia will no longer include asymptomatic coronavirus patients in its daily count of new infections and deaths, the Health Ministry said.
— Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov said he is “healthy,” even demonstrating that his arms don’t have IV marks, after rumors that he was hospitalized with possible coronavirus.
— Russia announced that the coronavirus pandemic has forced it to postpone two international summits, the BRICS and SCO summits, which were set for St. Petersburg in July.
— Russia’s consumer protection watchdog said the capital is ready to enter the first phases of lifting its coronavirus restrictions.
— The Russian military announced it had opened a field hospital in the North Caucasus region of Dagestan where authorities are struggling to contain a coronavirus outbreak.
May 26
— Russia confirmed 8,915 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 362,342.
— President Vladimir Putin has ordered the Russian military to hold its landmark parade marking the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory in World War II, which was originally scheduled for May 9, on June 24, pointing to what he said was a stabilization of the coronavirus in Russia.
— About 50% of Russians have abandoned their vacation plans due to the coronavirus, the ROMIR research agency said. The previous day, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said that Russians should avoid traveling abroad this summer.
— Russia’s Health Ministry said that 101 Russian medics have died from the coronavirus. According to an unofficial tally kept by Russian and Belarussian doctors, 305 medics have died from the virus.
May 25
— Russia confirmed 8,946 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 353,427.
— President Vladimir Putin has signed a law allowing Russians to vote by mail or online in a move supporters say will prevent the spread of the coronavirus and opponents claim will open the door to manipulation.
— Putin congratulated Muslims across Russia on the Eid al-Fitr holiday, a feast marking the end of the month-long fast of Ramadan. Authorities in Moscow and Russia’s Muslim-majority regions have canceled prayer gatherings and ordered mosques to remain closed to prevent the spread of Covid-19.
— A provincial leader outside Moscow was heard telling his subordinates to alter his region’s coronavirus data in an audio recording leaked Monday that he later confirmed to be authentic.
May 24
— President Vladimir Putin warned that a second wave of the coronavirus epidemic could hit Russia this fall as he noted that the country’s current outbreak is stabilizing.
— Russia confirmed 8,599 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 344,481. Russia has the third-highest number of infections behind the United States and Brazil, but the number of new cases has fallen below 10,000 for nine days in a row.
— Russia is expected this month to register a spike in mortality rates amid the coronavirus epidemic, Deputy Prime Minister Tatiana Golikova said.
— Russia has carried out its first test of a coronavirus vaccine on humans, the head of the Gamaleya Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology said. The vaccine was tested on the center’s own employees and no side effects were reportedly found.
May 22
— One in three Russian doctors who treat coronavirus patients have been told to change how they report cases, according to a survey cited by the Meduza news website amid questions over Russia’s low Covid-19 death toll.
— One out of seven healthy Russians may have been infected with the coronavirus, according to a Moscow-based private lab analysis of voluntary testing published Friday.
— Starting May 25, Moscow’s public registry services will re-open and car-sharing will resume, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. All other lockdown restrictions remain in place.
— Moscow has managed to avoid the “worst-case scenario” with the coronavirus, Sobyanin said, but stressed that it’s necessary to maintain current lockdown measures.
— People who violate lockdown orders in the Moscow region surrounding the capital will be punished with up to 100 hours of community service in hospitals, the region’s security services said.
May 21
— Russia confirmed 8,849 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 317,554.
— Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov has been hospitalized in Moscow with a suspected coronavirus infection, Interfax reported, citing an unnamed source in Moscow’s medical services.
— A U.S. military plane carrying dozens of donated American ventilators touched down in Moscow, with the precious cargo ready to be sent to a hospital treating coronavirus patients.
— At least 9,479 Russian medical workers have been infected with the coronavirus in the past month and more than 70 have died, the Associated Press reported, citing official statements and news reports in more than 70 Russian regions. Healthcare workers say the death toll is much higher.
May 20
— Russia confirmed 8,764 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 308,705 and marking the lowest daily increase since May 1.
— Moscow’s coronavirus death rate will be “significantly” higher in May than it was in April, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin warned.
May 19
— Russia confirmed 9,263 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 299,941.
— Russian medics are 16 times more likely to die from the coronavirus than healthcare professionals in countries with similarly high Covid-19 numbers, the Mediazona news website reported.
— Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin has resumed his official duties nearly three weeks after first announcing that he had been diagnosed with the coronavirus and naming an acting prime minister.
— The Saratov region has reinstated its ban on walks and outdoor activities a week after easing the restriction due to the region’s high growth rate in new coronavirus cases, its vice governor said.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said the situation with the coronavirus in Moscow is “still far from ideal.”
— Government offices in Moscow will reopen next week, and some clinics will be allowed to provide planned medical treatments. Sobyanin said that it was still too soon to think about reopening other parts of the capital such as shopping centers or hairdressers.
— Moscow authorities announced plans to double testing capacity to 200,000 a day by the end of May.
— Moscow residents will be allowed to go outside to walk or exercise only when the number of new daily infections reaches the “tens or hundreds, not thousands,” Sobyanin added. Moscow reported 3,545 new cases.
— Russia’s second-largest city St. Petersburg has banned residents from attending funeral services regardless of the cause of death of the deceased, the Fontanka.ru news website reported.
May 18
— Russia confirmed 8,926 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 290,678 and signaling a potential slowdown in new cases.
— Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said that the growth in new coronavirus cases has been stopped in Russia.
— Russia’s national coronavirus crisis center has stopped updating the latest Covid-19 death counts in at least two Siberian regions while the regions have published new numbers, the Tayga.info news website reported.
— Twenty-seven of Russia’s 85 regions are ready to start gradually easing coronavirus restrictions, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said.
— President Vladimir Putin said the coronavirus situation in Dagestan required urgent attention after a top official said hundreds of people in the region might have died from the virus.
— Russia’s consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor has recommended that Russian airlines fill their flights by no more than 50% in order to adequately space passengers apart from each other.
— Russia’s low coronavirus death toll compared to other countries is a result of the population’s herd immunity, the head of Russia’s Gamaleya Research Center for Epidemiology and Microbiology Alexander Gintsburg said.
May 17
— Russia confirmed 9,709 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 281,752.
— A baby was born with the coronavirus in Russia’s Caucasus region of North Ossetia, health officials were quoted by the state-run TASS news agency as saying, to a mother who is also infected. The birth in the city of Beslan follows one in mid-April in Peru, which health officials there said was the second known case of a Covid-19 positive newborn worldwide.
— The growth of new cases in Russia is stabilizing, Anna Popova, the head of public health watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said, as the daily tally fell under 10,000 for the third day this week. “We’ve moved towards the level of stability that we’ve all been waiting for .. I would say that as of today, we have halted the growth,” she told the state television channel Rossiya 1.
— More than 13,000 people in Dagestan have contracted the coronavirus or community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), the region’s health minister said. A total of 657 people have died from Covid-19 or CAP, including 40 doctors, he added. According to official statistics, there have been 3,371 coronavirus infections and just 29 deaths from Covid-19 in the region.
— Russia confirmed 9,709 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 281,752.
May 16
— Russia confirmed 9,200 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 272,043 and signaling a potential slowing of new cases.
May 15
— Russia confirmed 10,598 new coronavirus infections Friday, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 262,843.
— The Russian Premier League’s season will resume June 21, the Russian Football Union (RFU) said Friday. The matches, which have been suspended since March 17, will be held without spectators.
— Yandex will end its free coronavirus testing program, the tech giant said, adding that it has carried out 20,000 of the free tests since the program began on April 20.
May 14
— Russia confirmed 9,974 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 252,245.
— Clinics in Moscow, the epicenter of Russia’s coronavirus epidemic, will begin mass random testing of residents for coronavirus antibodies on Friday, the mayor said.
— President Vladimir Putin said the coronavirus outbreak was easing in Russia, after daily confirmed cases dropped back below 10,000.
“Over the past weeks, all our efforts have been aimed first and foremost at pushing back against the coronavirus epidemic,” Putin said in a televised videoconference with scientists and officials. “The situation is changing now, and this gives us an opportunity to once again focus on our current and long-term agenda.”
— Education and Science Minister Valery Falkov was diagnosed with coronavirus, President Vladimir Putin said at a meeting, making him the fourth minister to catch the virus. During the meeting, Falkov said he has already recovered and returned to work.
— Clinics in Moscow, the epicenter of Russia’s coronavirus epidemic, will begin mass random testing of residents for coronavirus antibodies on Friday, the mayor said. The free and voluntary testing will “show the real picture” of the epidemic’s stage, since many people may have had the virus without knowing it, Sergei Sobyanin told state television.
“Every three days we will send out 70,000 invitations to Moscow residents” to have their blood drawn at clinics, he said.
May 13
— Russia confirmed 10,028 new coronavirus infections Wednesday, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 242,271.
— More than 60% of deaths among Moscow’s coronavirus patients are not being counted toward the city’s official virus death toll, city health officials said.
— Russian low-cost airline Pobeda will resume its domestic flights on June 1 after suspending all its flights in late March, the RBC news website reported.
— Russia’s oldest coronavirus patient, 100-year-old Pelageya Poyarkova, has fully recovered from the illness, the Federal Biomedical Agency (FMBA) said Wednesday.
— Russia might not see its pre-coronavirus levels of tourism return until January 2021, officials said Tuesday.
— State Duma deputy Oksana Pushkina has tested positive for the coronavirus, she said.
— Nearly 1,500 doctors and healthcare workers in St. Petersburg have been infected with coronavirus since the epidemic began, Governor Alexander Beglov said.
May 12
— Russia confirmed 10,899 new coronavirus infections Tuesday, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 232,243.
— President Vladimir Putin has eased Russia’s “non-working” period imposed to slow the spread of coronavirus even as Russia emerges as Europe’s new coronavirus hotspot.
— Five people died in a fire in a hospital for coronavirus patients in Russia’s second-largest city of St. Petersburg, with some victims attached to ventilators, officials said.
— President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov has been hospitalized with coronavirus, he told the state-run RIA Novosti news agency Tuesday.
— Starting today, Moscow residents will be required to wear face masks and gloves in all public places.
— Russian pharmacy chains are reporting shortages in thermometers, according to the Kommersant business daily.
May 11
— Russia confirmed 11,656 new coronavirus infections Monday, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 221,344 and marking a new one-day record increase.
— Russia’s second-largest city, St. Petersburg, has extended its coronvirus lockdown until May 31 and will require its residents to wear face masks and gloves in public starting May 12.
— Russia has conducted more than 5.6 million coronavirus tests, its state consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said, or about 188,000 tests per day.
May 10
— Russia confirmed 11,012 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 209,688.
May 9
— Russia confirmed 10,817 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 198,676.
— President Vladimir Putin called for Russians to stand together on Saturday as the country marked the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II on lockdown over the virus. “We know and firmly believe that we are invincible when we stand together,” Putin said in a televised speech after plans for a grand Victory Day military parade in Red Square had to be postponed because of the pandemic.
— Moscow’s coronavirus lockdown has been extended until May 31, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. Starting May 12, Moscow residents will be required to wear face masks and gloves in all public places and transport, Sobyanin said.
— One person died after a fire broke out in a hospital treating coronavirus patients in northern Moscow, forcing an evacuation, emergencies officials said.
May 8
— Russia confirmed 10,699 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 187,859. Russia is now the fifth most-affected country in terms of infections, surpassing Germany and France on Thursday.
— Hundreds of thousands of Moscow’s rapid antibody tests labeled as Dutch-made are unreliable at detecting the coronavirus in its early stages, meaning patients who receive false negatives could potentially infect others, a new investigation has said.
May 7
— Russia confirmed 11,231 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 177,160 and marking a new one-day record rise in infections.
— The real number of coronavirus infections in Moscow is likely around 300,000, Sobyanin said. Officially, the city has 92,676 cases.
— Leonid Fedun, the billionaire energy tycoon who co-founded Lukoil and owns FC Spartak Moscow, has been hospitalized with coronavirus.
May 6
— Russia confirmed 10,559 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 165,929.
— Russian Culture Minister Olga Lyubimova has tested positive for the coronavirus, becoming the third Russian cabinet official to become infected with the virus after construction minister Vladimir Yakushev and Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said stay-at-home restrictions would remain in place beyond May 12, but companies involved in industry and construction would be allowed to return to work that day.
— Moscow residents could be required to wear face masks in all public spaces as early as next week, the Kommersant business daily reported.
— Russian prosecutors have shot down online conspiracy theories about the coronavirus’ manmade origins as fake, the Prosecutor General’s Office said in a statement Wednesday.
— Moscow has conducted 1 million coronavirus tests since the start of its outbreak, the city’s coronavirus task force said, citing deputy mayor Anastasia Rakova. More than 40,000 tests are carried out daily. Nationwide, 4.4 million tests have been carried out.
May 5
— Russia confirmed 10,102 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 155,370.
— Three Russian journalists have died from the coronavirus, the head of Russia’s Journalists Union told Interfax. More than 100 have been hospitalized with the virus and more than 500 are self-isolating at home under the supervision of health services.
— Russia has sent medical research supplies and two mobile laboratories to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to help the African country fight the coronavirus, Interfax reported.
May 4
— Russia confirmed 10,581 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 145,268.
— Authorities in St. Petersburg have pledged to pay compensation to doctors who become infected with the coronavirus — but only after an investigation establishes their level of responsibility for getting it, according to newly adopted rules.
— Bosnia denied entry to a team of 24 Russian military medical experts who had come to the Balkan country to carry out decontamination work.
— Starting May 8, all individuals flying from Moscow to Beijing will be required to provide proof of a negative coronavirus test received 120 hours or less before departure.
— Russia has removed its ban on the export of medical masks and respirators, Industry and Trade Minister Denis Manturov told the state-run Rossia 1 news channel. He said there is no shortage of masks or other sanitary products in Russian pharmacies.
— The Russian National Guard said it is using drones and a helicopter to enforce self-isolation rules in Moscow and the Moscow region over the May holidays. The drones and helicopter will send information about violations to officers on the ground, who will then issue fines to violators.
May 3
— Russia confirmed 10,633 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 134,687 and marking a new one-day record increase.
May 2
— Russia confirmed 9,623 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 124,054 and marking a new one-day record increase.
— About 2% of Moscow residents — or more than 250,000 people — have the coronavirus, the mayor of the Russian capital said on Saturday, citing test results. Around 2,000 Moscow doctors have either recovered from or are currently ill with Covid-19, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
May 1
— Russia confirmed 7,933 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 114,431 and marking a new one-day record increase.
— Half of Moscow’s coronavirus patients in serious condition have tested negative for the virus, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said Thursday amid questions over the accuracy of Russia’s tests.
— Moscow is setting up 44 temporary hospitals which will treat up to 10,000 coronavirus patients, deputy mayor Pyotr Biryukov said.
April 30
— Russia confirmed 7,099 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 106,498 and marking a new one-day record increase.
— Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin has been diagnosed with coronavirus, he said during a video meeting with President Vladimir Putin broadcast on the state-run Rossiya 24 television channel Thursday.
— More than 300 members of the National Guard have contracted coronavirus, the defense force said.
— Residents of the Moscow region will soon be required to wear masks in public places, the governor of the region surrounding the capital said.
— The opening of Russia’s new Orthodox mega-cathedral dedicated to the Armed Forces has been indefinitely postponed due to the coronavirus, Interfax reported. The cathedral was originally scheduled to open to mark the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory over the Nazis on May 9.
April 29
— Russia confirmed 5,841 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 99,399.
— More than 1,000 Russian military personnel have tested positive for coronavirus, the Defense Ministry said.
— Moscow will start constructing temporary hospitals that will hold a total of 10,000 beds for coronavirus patients, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.
— Russia will allow its nationals who hold second passports to leave the country amid the coronavirus outbreak, according to a government decree issued Wednesday.
— Konstantin Malofeyev, the billionaire often referred to as Russia’s “Orthodox tycoon,” said he has contracted the coronavirus.
— Russia has indefinitely extended its entry ban for foreigners, which was originally set to end May 1, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said.
— A group suspected of attempting to sell 100 counterfeit ventilators used to treat coronavirus patients have been detained after an armed confrontation outside Moscow, news outlets reported Wednesday.
April 28
— Russia confirmed 6,411 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 93,558 and marking a new one-day record increase.
— President Vladimir Putin has extended the national “non-working” month through May 11 as Russia continued to see sharp daily rises in new coronavirus infections in recent days. Moscow’s coronavirus lockdown has also been extended until May 11.
— Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin has ordered the federal consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor to draft a coronavirus lockdown exit strategy for the country by Wednesday.
— More than 270 Federal Penitentiary Service (FSIN) workers have contracted the coronavirus, the Russian prison authority said. Its press service said that 40 inmates have tested positive for the virus nationwide.
— A priest at the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius monastery in Sergiev Posad who was diagnosed with coronavirus died on Sunday two days after he escaped from the hospital and attempted to take his own life, the monastery said. Following media reports that the priest had set himself on fire, Russian Orthodox Church archpriest Leonid Kalinin told the Govorit Moskva radio station that the 90% of the priest’s body was covered in burns.
April 27
— Russia confirmed 6,198 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 87,147. Russia has now surpassed China to become the world’s ninth most-affected country amid the pandemic.
— Russian doctors mistrustful of official coronavirus data have launched an unofficial list of their colleagues who have died from the virus.
— The republic of Karelia in northern Russia will create an interactive map of the places where confirmed coronavirus patients in the region live, including their street names and house numbers, in order for the region’s residents to avoid these places, its head Artur Parfenchikov wrote.
— The Immortal Regiment, an annual tradition in which millions of people in Russia parade with portraits of relatives who fought in World War II, will take place in an online video broadcast this year as the coronavirus has canceled Victory Day events.
— The head of a Siberian hospital repurposed for coronavirus patients is in critical condition after she fell from the hospital building following a conference call with health officials, local media reported Saturday.
— The Nizhny Novgorod region will ban entry into the region unless one has an emergency work permit or proof of residence there, its governor said. The region has Russia’s fourth-highest number of coronavirus cases, after Moscow, the Moscow region and St. Petersburg.
— Nearly 50 employees at the Mariinsky Hospital in St. Petersburg have tested positive for coronavirus, the local Fontanka.ru news website reported. Starting Monday, the hospital will only treat patients with coronavirus, with all other patients transferred to other hospitals.
— At least 874 Russian troops tested positive for Covid-19 between March and April 26, 19 of whom are in critical or serious condition, the Defense Ministry said.
April 26
— Russia confirmed 6,361 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 80,949 and marking the highest one-day increase so far. Overall, 747 people have been killed by the virus.
— In St. Petersburg, four nurses have died of coronavirus this month, officials confirmed.
April 25
— Two Russian lawmakers — Leonid Kalashnikov and Dmitry Novikov, both of the Communist Party — have been infected with the coronavirus and are being treated in hospital. They are the first positive Covid-19 cases to be confirmed from among Russia’s 450-seat State Duma.
April 24
— Authorities in Russia’s western exclave of Kaliningrad will end the region’s coronavirus lockdown for most residents starting April 29, Governor Anton Alikhanov said, making it the first Russian region to do so. Nonessential businesses will re-open on April 29 and salons and hairdressers will re-open on May 4. All residents will be required to wear masks and observe social distancing in public.
— Moscow authorities will not ease the city’s self-isolation orders during the May holidays which include Labor Day and Victory Day, the mayor’s office said. Meanwhile, the head of Russia’s consumer health watchdog argued self-isolation should be extended by at least another two weeks, until the middle of May.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said he has asked Russia’s Health Ministry and Education Ministry to prepare fourth- and fifth-year medical students to help treat coronavirus patients.
— More than 40% of Moscow’s health system is now being used in the city’s fight against coronavirus, deputy mayor for social development Anastasia Rakova said.
— All of Moscow’s doctors and nurses will take an express test to detect the presence of coronavirus antibodies and test their immunity to the virus, Rakova told reporters.
April 23
— Vladislav Filev, the owner of Russian carrier S7 Airlines, has predicted that international air traffic which has been largely halted due to the pandemic will resume in April 2021.
— Russia will temporarily suspend deportations of foreigners over the next two months due to the coronavirus outbreak, the Interior Ministry said Thursday.
— More than 100,000 pregnant women will be unable to undergo medical abortions in Moscow because of restrictions during the coronavirus outbreak, the women’s rights organization Nasiliyu.net (“No to Violence”) Center has said.
— Russia’s Labor Ministry has ordered mental health facilities and nursing homes to quarantine residents and employees for two weeks in a move to fight the coronavirus outbreak, the state-run TASS news agency reported.
— Staff in the neurological department of the Lyubertsy Regional Hospital near Moscow have asked the FSB to investigate the hospital’s administration. According to the staffers, 52 doctors have been infected with coronavirus due to management’s actions.
— A hospital in the Chelyabinsk region city of Zlatoust has been quarantined after 44 patients and staff became infected with coronavirus, the region’s governor said. He added that the outbreak happened as a result of “a procedural error in providing medical assistance to one of the patients.”
April 22
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin warned that the regions’ hospitals risk running out of beds within three to four weeks at current rates of infection.
— At least 21 Russian regions have requested digital travel passes a week after coronavirus-hit Moscow enacted its system to enforce lockdown measures and slow the deadly outbreak, the Communications and Press Ministry said Wednesday.
— The lives of thousands of Russian patients with rare diseases are in danger because the country’s hospitals are being repurposed to address the coronavirus outbreak, the Kommersant business daily reported Wednesday.
— The authors of Russia’s delayed domestic abuse law have asked the government to take emergency steps to protect victims during the coronavirus quarantine, the RBC news website reported.
— Russia’s mosques will close during the holy month of Ramadan, Ravil Gainutdin, the chairman of the Council of Muftis which represents Russia’s Muslim community, said on live television.
— The Khabarovsk region in Russia’s Far East has become the third region to require residents to wear face masks in public, following the Amur region and the republic of Tatarstan.
April 21
— A new Moscow hospital built in a little over a month to treat coronavirus patients has admitted its first 20 patients, the Moscow mayor’s office said as the Russian capital continues to battle an onslaught of new cases.
— A number of unidentified African countries have asked Russia to assist them in the fight against coronavirus, Russia’s Foreign Ministry said.
— Authorities in Moscow will start monitoring the movements of all people showing coronavirus symptoms using their cellphone geolocation data. The city was already tracking the movements of confirmed coronavirus patients who are self-isolating at home.
— The rector of Moscow’s Yelokhovo Cathedral, Archpriest Alexander Ageykin, has reportedly died from coronavirus. His death marks the highest-level coronavirus-related death within the Russian Orthodox Church.
April 20
— The Russian military will quarantine everyone involved in rehearsals for Russia’s postponed Victory Day Parade, the Defense Ministry said following reports that some participants have tested positive for the coronavirus.
—Around 500 demonstrators gathered in the southern Russian city of Vladikavkaz to protest against job losses and lack of information about the coronavirus outbreak, the MBKh News website reported Monday.
— Russians should stop coming to Crimea during the coronavirus pandemic, its Moscow-backed leader said Monday after a surge in traffic to the annexed peninsula this weekend.
— Russia has extended visas and other temporary residence permits for foreigners from March 15 to June 15 during the coronavirus pandemic that has shut national borders around the world. Putin’s act bans authorities from canceling visas and work permits, as well as from deporting and denying people refugee and temporary asylum status until June 15.
— Russia says it has so far carried out over 2 million tests nationwide.
— Dozens of patients and staff have been infected with the coronavirus at a psychiatric hospital in Russia’s northwestern Arkhangelsk region.
— More than half of 149 overall Covid-19 cases in central Russia’s Sverdlovsk region are concentrated in one hospital in the regional capital of Yekaterinburg, governor Yevgeny Kuyvashev said. City hospital No. 1 was placed under quarantine after 78 of its doctors and patients tested positive for the virus, Kuyvashev said on social media. Most of them are asymptomatic, he added, while one patient is in critical condition.
April 19
— Millions of Russians celebrated Orthodox Easter amid the coronavirus pandemic. Russian Patriarch Kirill, who leads 150 million believers, held a service in Moscow’s Christ the Savior Church without worshippers. President Vladimir Putin did not go to a service as usual but visited a chapel at his country residence.
April 17
— President Vladimir Putin postponed a landmark military parade to mark the 75th anniversary of Soviet victory in World War II.
— Moscow, the epicenter of Russia’s coronavirus outbreak, will begin treating respiratory infections as Covid-19 as the disease shows no signs of slowing down, a senior city official has said.
— The Russian government has authorized hospitals to treat coronavirus patients with the untested Chinese malaria drug hydroxychloroquine, which studies have linked to deadly side effects.
— Russian national carrier Aeroflot has closed ticket sales for all international flights until Aug. 1, the Kommersant business daily reported.
— About half of Russia’s coronavirus cases are asymptomatic, the head of consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said.
— St. Petersburg can expect to see anywhere from 40,000 to 120,000 coronavirus cases by June depending on how closely residents follow lockdown orders, Alexei Borovkov, a member of the city’s coronavirus task force, has said. The city has 1,507 confirmed cases so far.
— Russia’s Emergency Situations Ministry has advised against wearing face masks for regular trips outside, recommending their use only in crowded places, on public transport or when caring for a sick person.
April 16
— Russian tech giant Yandex will start delivering coronavirus tests to the homes of Moscow residents aged 65 and older. The first 10,000 tests will be delivered at no cost, the company said, and the test delivery service will later be expanded to all age groups.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin signed a decree to provide the city’s doctors with free taxi rides to and from work, as well as free hotel accommodation, during the coronavirus outbreak.
— Moscow authorities said they have switched to random checks of public transit passengers’ quarantine passes rather than checking each person’s pass after large queues formed outside metro stations during rush hour Wednesday.
— President Vladimir Putin believes the global coronavirus pandemic is an opportunity for his country to work together with the United States, the Kremlin said. U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday offered to send ventilators to Russia.
— One-third of all coronavirus infections in the Leningrad region are concentrated in a crowded hostel that houses migrant workers involved in construction at an IKEA-owned shopping mall, local media reported.
April 15
— Russian officials denounced U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to cut Washington’s funding to the World Health Organization (WHO), with Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov calling the move a “very selfish approach” and “very disturbing.”
— President Vladimir Putin announced a new package of measures to support Russia’s businesses hit by the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.
— Muscovites complained of large queues outside metro stations and severe traffic jams on the first day of the city’s mandatory digital lockdown passes, prompting concern that the coronavirus could spread further.
— Russia’s coronavirus information center will be headed by doctor and television presenter Alexander Myasnikov, BBC Russia reported. Myasnikov previously predicted that it would be “impossible” for the virus to spread to Russia.
— The Murmansk region will use electronic bracelets to monitor the movements of coronavirus patients self-isolating at home and people suspected of having the coronavirus, the investigative Novaya Gazeta newspaper reported.
— The head of Moscow’s main coronavirus hospital has recovered from the virus two weeks after he tested positive.
April 14
— Moscow could face a shortage of hospital beds for coronavirus patients in the next two to three weeks, the city’s health department warned. It added that an additional 24 hospitals will be converted to accommodate coronavirus patients, bringing the total number of beds to 21,000. Moscow has 13,002 coronavirus cases as of Tuesday.
— Moscow rejected 900,000 applications for digital lockdown passes in the passes’ first day of operation due to residents entering incorrect or inaccurate information, the city’s coronavirus response center said. The city issued 3.2 million passes for residents to leave their homes on Monday.
— Nine doctors at a hospital in the Moscow region have been infected with coronavirus, the RBC news website reported Tuesday. Doctors there had complained that the hospital doesn’t isolate patients suspected of having coronavirus and that there’s a shortage of personal protective equipment.
— A group of liberal Russian economists called on the government to send cash payments to the public in order to avoid an economic crisis caused by the coronavirus, the RBC news website reported.
— Moscow traffic police will start checking all cars entering the city for digital lockdown passes starting Wednesday.
April 13
— Moscow introduced its digital pass system to allow residents to leave their homes this week. Traffic police have also been deployed at all city entry points to control movement and ask drivers why they’re entering the Russian capital during the coronavirus lockdown, according to state media.
— China’s northeastern Heilongjiang province has tightened its border controls to prevent new coronavirus infections from neighboring Russia, Bloomberg reported. A growing number of Chinese nationals have returned from Russia with the virus, threatening a new outbreak in the country where the pandemic originated.
— The Russian Orthodox Church’s St. Petersburg diocese has ordered the city’s cathedrals to close their Holy Week and Easter services to the public and broadcast services online.
— Russian Railways will indefinitely suspend free long-distance rail travel for World War II veterans to encourage over-65s to stay home. The free travel offer had been introduced ahead of the 75th anniversary of Victory Day in May.
— More than 500 Russian writers, publishers and bookstores have signed an open letter asking the government to provide support to the book industry after the coronavirus lockdown shuttered bookstores across the country.
April 12
— More than half of China’s coronavirus infections reported on Sunday originated from a Russian flight to Shanghai the day before, a potential sign of the severity of Russia’s outbreak, Bloomberg reported. So far this month, China’s northeastern Heilongjiang province has reported more than 100 infections imported from Russia through its land borders.
April 10
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin announced additional lockdown measures from April 13-19 in order to slow the spread of the coronavirus, with all nonessential business and activity suspended. Grocery stores and pharmacies will stay open, and only the government, hospitals, protective gear manufacturers and the defense sector will continue to work. All construction and maintenance work is suspended, as are car-sharing services.
— In a statement Friday, Sobyanin also said that Moscow will gradually introduce a digital pass system to enforce lockdown rules starting April 14.
— Moscow’s health department has warned the city’s clinics that many coronavirus tests return false negative results, the Kommersant business daily reported.
— President Vladimir Putin spoke with U.S. counterpart Donald Trump for the third time in two weeks, discussing the coronavirus pandemic and global oil prices.
— Moscow’s hospitals and ambulance service are working at peak capacity after a sharp rise in those hospitalized with serious coronavirus complications, a senior city official said Friday.
— A detention center east of Moscow has been placed under lockdown after the alleged death of one of its inspectors from coronavirus, the Mash Telegram channel reported.
— The Russian Orthodox Church has advised worshippers to pray at home during the Holy Week and Easter, the Church’s most important holidays.
April 9
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin has temporarily banned Muscovites from visiting the city’s cemeteries except for those attending funerals.
— The health minister of Russia’s northwestern republic of Komi has resigned after the remote region became one of the country’s hotspots for the coronavirus.
— Moscow is planning to track foreign tourists’ movements through smartphone geolocation for coronavirus prevention after Russia reopens its national borders, the Kommersant business daily reported.
— Coronavirus patients in Moscow have started to receive blood plasma transfusions from recovered patients, the city’s deputy mayor for social development said. Blood plasma from coronavirus survivors has been found to help current patients recover from the virus.
— Russia’s consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnazdor said that more than 1 million coronavirus tests have been carried out across the country.
April 8
— Putin has ordered the government to automatically renew documents for Russian citizens, including passports and driver’s licenses, for as long as the coronavirus situation persists. Speaking at a televised conference, he also ordered the government to create a business support program within five days and said doctors will receive a monthly bonus while dealing with the pandemic.
— Moscow police will now be able to directly issue fines to residents who violate lockdown orders, according to an agreement between the Interior Ministry and the city government.
— Russia has now sent coronavirus test kits to more than 30 countries, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said at a meeting of the government’s coronavirus task force.
— Russian Railways will reduce the number of Sapsan high-speed trains between Moscow and St. Petersburg to four per day in each direction amid reduced demand due to the coronavirus.
— The airport in Grozny, the capital of Russia’s republic of Chechnya, will require all passengers arriving from Moscow to provide proof of a negative coronavirus test starting April 11.
— Moscow City Duma deputy Mikhail Timonov has reportedly tested positive for coronavirus. He had attended city council meetings as recently as April 1, when it voted to impose fines on Muscovites who violate lockdown orders.
April 7
— The head of a top Russian research center told Putin that his lab was ready to start human trials of experimental coronavirus vaccines in June.
— Putin has asked health experts whether it would be possible to end Russia’s paid “non-working” period sooner than planned. He originally declared a “non-working” week from March 28 to April 5, then extended the period until April 30. During the meeting, he added that the peak of the coronavirus epidemic in Russia hasn’t passed yet.
— The head doctor at Moscow’s Davydovsky hospital, Yelena Vasiliyeva, has tested positive for coronavirus, the Mash Telegram channel reported. Because she continued to work and attend conferences while waiting for the test results, more than 500 patients and doctors who were in contact with her are now self-quarantining and getting tested for the virus.
— Russia’s largest business associations have called on the government to introduce a sweeping package of measures to support employers amid the coronavirus lockdown. In a letter to Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin, firms asked the government to cover two-thirds of employees’ salaries for those who cannot work due to the shutdown.
— Russia has conducted more than 795,000 coronavirus tests so far, the federal consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said.
April 6
— Russia will send $1 million to the World Health Organization to help in the fight against coronavirus, according to a decree signed by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.
— Three Russian Orthodox priests in Moscow have been hospitalized with coronavirus, the state-run RIA Novosti news agency reported.
— It is “unacceptable” for Russia’s regions to close their borders with other regions of the country, Mishustin said at a meeting with regional envoys after the republic of Chechnya sealed off its borders. The Kremlin also called such measures “excessive.”
— Russia’s health watchdog Rosdravnadzor has developed an “express” coronavirus test that can test at 94% accuracy within 40 minutes, the Industry and Trade Ministry said.
— Three regions of Russia — the Irkutsk region, Tomsk region and Krasnoyarsk region — have begun ordering all people arriving from Moscow and St. Petersburg to self-isolate for two weeks in a move to prevent the spread of coronavirus.
April 3
— President Vladimir Putin announced an extension of the nationwide “non-working week” until April 30 after the country registered a sharp increase in coronavirus cases. He added that he would delegate the decisionmaking power on anti-coronavirus measures to regional authorities.
— Russia will halt flights returning its nationals from abroad after midnight Saturday, Interfax cited an unnamed source at an unnamed airline as saying. Domodedovo, one of Moscow’s four international airports, has shut down its international flights board, according to the state-run TASS news agency.
— Russia has sent military medics and equipment to Serbia, the latest country Moscow is helping to fight the global coronavirus pandemic as it also flexes its soft power muscles.
— Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said that the city will hold off on introducing a QR code pass system to enforce movements under quarantine and extended the quarantine until May 1. He said city authorities would reconsider implementing the system if the coronavirus situation worsens or the number of self-isolation violations rises.
— Moscow residents may now only ride together in a private vehicle if they live at the same address, Moscow City Duma speaker Alexei Shaposhnikov said.
— Anastasia Vasiliyeva, the head of the Doctors’ Alliance, an independent trade union linked to Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, was detained overnight in the Nizhny Novgorod region. She and other members of the union were there to donate protective gear to doctors fighting the coronavirus, the union tweeted.
April 2
— Sobyanin signed a law imposing fines on Muscovites found to be violating the city’s self-isolation orders. Individuals will be fined up to 4,000 rubles ($50) for first-time offenses and up to 5,000 rubles ($63) for repeat offenses. Businesses will be fined up to 40,000 rubles ($500) for violating the order. Legal entities will be fined up to 300,000 rubles ($3,800) for first-time offenses and up to 500,000 rubles ($6,300) for repeat offenses.
— The United States purchased medical supplies from Russia to battle the coronavirus outbreak in the country, the State Department said, contradicting the Kremlin’s description of the shipment as humanitarian aid.
— The Nizhny Novgorod region has launched a QR code pass system to allow residents to leave their homes for essential reasons. Moscow has announced it is developing a similar pass system for its 12 million residents but hasn’t launched it yet.
— One of Moscow’s leading cancer hospitals, the Blokhin Cancer Center, has stopped admitting patients to chemotherapy sessions after one of the department’s medics tested positive for coronavirus. All of the chemotherapy department’s employees have been quarantined and its patients are under special supervision, the hospital said.
April 1
— Putin signed legislation imposing severe punishment — including up to five years in prison — for people convicted of spreading false information about the coronavirus. The legislation also imposes punishments for people breaking coronavirus quarantine rules, including up to seven years in prison.
— Russia has earmarked almost $18 billion to battle the coronavirus pandemic, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin told Putin during a televised video conference.
— Moscow authorities have developed a QR code system to allow residents to leave their homes as well as a smartphone app to monitor coronavirus patients’ movement in self-isolation, the city’s IT chief said Wednesday after tech experts raised privacy questions.
— President Vladimir Putin is now practicing social distancing with everyone and doesn’t shake hands, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters. He has also started holding meetings remotely.
— A nurse at a police hospital in the Lipetsk region has potentially infected eight of her colleagues with the coronavirus after she returned to work with symptoms instead of self-isolating, the Kommersant business daily reported. Lipetsk region governor Igor Artamonov condemned what he said was “criminal negligence” in a statement.
— Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport, the capital’s main transport hub, has closed a third terminal due to reduced air traffic caused by the coronavirus, leaving three terminals open.
— Russia will extend its suspension of football matches in the face of the coronavirus pandemic until May 31, the Russian football association (RFS) said.
— Several regions of Russia have imposed limits on alcohol sales during their self-isolation regimes. Some cities in Siberia’s republic of Sakha, including Yakutsk, have banned the sale of alcohol altogether.
— Russia’s consumer protection watchdog has ordered quotas on the number of Russians being returned from abroad per day, the Kommersant business daily reported, a move that the Foreign Ministry said “immediately complicated, and in some places paralyzed, the process of returning” the approximately 35,000 Russians seeking to return.
March 31
— Denis Protsenko, the head doctor at the infectious diseases hospital treating Moscow’s coronavirus patients, has tested positive with the virus, the state-run Rossia 24 television station reported. He was photographed shaking hands with President Vladimir Putin six days ago.
— A Russian plane carrying medical equipment and protective gear has departed for the coronavirus-hit United States. U.S. President Donald Trump “accepted this humanitarian aid with gratitude,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday.
— The Justice Ministry has proposed suspending registrations of marriage and divorce in Russia until at least June 1 in order to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.
March 30
— Moscow has enacted a citywide quarantine from Monday, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said as the city’s number of coronavirus cases surpassed 1,000 over the weekend. Moscow residents will only be allowed to leave their homes to seek emergency medical care, shop for food or medicine, go to work, walk pets or take out the garbage.
— Russia’s second-largest city St. Petersburg announced stay-at-home orders for their residents following Moscow’s quarantine.
— In televised comments on state television, President Vladimir Putin said decisive measures by Russia had helped win it time in its battle to contain the coronavirus and to prevent an explosive growth in cases, but that it was vital authorities now used that time effectively.
— Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin asked Russia’s regional governors to consider imposing the same restrictions on movement to halt the spread of the coronavirus that have been imposed in Moscow, the state-run RIA news agency reported.
— The makeshift memorial to opposition politician Boris Nemtsov at the site near the Kremlin where he was gunned down in 2015 has been abandoned for the first time since his death due to Moscow’s stay-at-home order, the activists who had maintained a 24/7 watch at the memorial said.
— Several regions of Russia have enacted region-wide stay-at-home orders for residents, following suit with Moscow’s quarantine.