Russia on Saturday passed three million confirmed coronavirus
infections, as authorities hold out against reimposing a national lockdown
while the country is battered by a second wave.
Official figures showed that a total of 3,021,964 cases have been
detected, with 54,226 deaths.
In the past 24 hours, 29,258 new infections and 567 deaths were
registered in Russia, fourth on the list of hardest-hit countries worldwide.
Since winter began, each week has brought new records for new cases and
deaths, with epicentres in capital Moscow and second-largest city Saint
Petersburg.
Poorer regions of the country, often less well-equipped with medical
facilities, also report a troubling picture.
Nevertheless, official figures point to a lower death rate from the
virus in Russia than in western Europe or the United States, something
President Vladimir Putin has boasted about for months.
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Putin said last week at an annual press conference that Russia had done
a “better” job managing the pandemic than western countries.
But Russian authorities only count as COVID deaths those where an
autopsy confirms the virus was the main cause.
Statistics agency Rosstat in October recorded 50,000 more deaths than in
the same month last year.
And between March and October, there were 165,000 excess deaths compared
with the same period in 2019, suggesting the true toll of the pandemic is far
higher than authorities will admit.
Looking to protect a suffering economy, Moscow has so far refused to
order a new nationwide lockdown, aiming instead to protect people with mass
vaccinations using its homegrown Sputnik V shot.
Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said on public TV Saturday that the
vaccine is “safe and effective” for general use, authorising it to be
given to the over-60s.