Coronavirus death toll has triple the previous number reported earlier which makes it higher, making the country have
the third-largest number of fatalities.
In the previous months, the Russian president, Vladimir Putin,
has boasted about Russia’s low fatality rate from the virus, saying
earlier this month that it had done a better job at managing the
pandemic than western countries.
But since early in the pandemic, some Russian experts have said the government was playing down the country’s outbreak.
On Monday, Russian officials admitted that was true. The Ros-stat
statistics agency said that the number of deaths from all causes
recorded between January and November had risen by 229,700 compared with
the previous year.
“More than 81% of this increase in mortality over this period is due
to Covid,” said the deputy prime minister, Tatiana Golikova, meaning
that more than 186,000 Russians have died from Covid-19.
Russian health officials have registered more than 3m infections
since the start of the pandemic, putting the country’s caseload at
fourth-highest in the world.
But they have only reported 55,265 deaths – a much lower fatality rate than in other badly hit countries.
Russia has been criticised for only listing Covid deaths where an autopsy confirms the virus was the main cause.
Alexei Raksha, a demographer who left Rosstat in July, told AFP last
week that the Russian health ministry and the consumer health ministry
falsify coronavirus numbers.
Rosstat’s
new figures mean that Russia now has the world’s third-highest Covid-19
death toll behind the US with 333,140 and Brazil with 191,139,
according to an AFP count.
Russian authorities are holding out against reimposing a nationwide
lockdown. The Kremlin hopes to buttress the struggling economy even as
the country is battered by a second wave of infections.
Russia’s government predicts the economy will shrink by 3.9% this year, while its central bank expects an even deeper decline.
During his end-of-year press conference earlier this month, Putin
rejected the idea of imposing the kind of lockdown many European
countries introduced going into the Christmas holidays.
“If we follow the rules and demands of health regulators, then we do not need any lockdowns,” he said.
While strict measures have been imposed in some big cities,
authorities in many regions have limited restrictions to mask-wearing in
public spaces and reducing mass gatherings.
But many Russians flout social distancing rules, and in recent weeks
the country’s outbreak has overwhelmed poorly funded hospitals in the
regions.
Russia has instead pinned its hopes on corralling its outbreak by
vaccinating people with its Sputnik V jab, named after the Soviet-era
satellite.
The country launched a mass vaccination programme earlier this month,
first inoculating high-risk workers aged 18-60 without chronic
illnesses.
Over the weekend, the over-60s got the green light to receive the shot.
On Monday, Sputnik V’s developer, the state-run Gamaleya research
centre, said that around 700,000 doses had so far been released for
domestic use.
However, Russia has not said how many people it has vaccinated so
far, and according to recent surveys by state-run polling company VCIOM
and the Levada polling agency only 38% of Russians plan to get the shot.
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