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Tuesday 12 May 2020 - 00:58

Putin Announced that Russia’s Coronavirus-Related Days Off Work to End Tuesday

Story Code : 862107
Putin Announced that Russia’s Coronavirus-Related Days Off Work to End Tuesday
“Starting from tomorrow, May 12, the national period of non-working days will be over for all sectors of the economy,” Putin said, speaking at his latest videoconference meeting with medical officials, ministers and governors on Monday on the state of the coronavirus situation in the country.

This will allow sectors of the economy, including construction and agriculture, to resume their work, on the condition that they continue to follow strict safety rules.

Putin stressed that sanitary measures such as social distancing, restrictions on mass events, and mandatory wearing of facemasks in public will remain in place (pending regional authorities’ decisions).

Furthermore, he warned that Russians in high risk categories, including seniors over the age of 65, remain indoors.

Elsewhere in his remarks, Putin praised the health care system’s generally effective response to the pandemic, pointing to a dramatic increase in hospital beds for COVID-19 patients from 29,000 when the crisis started to 130,000 now.

The Russian strongman also suggested that the high mortality rate observed in some countries was connected to health care systems there being overloaded, saying this was not a problem experienced in Russia so far. Putin also praised the ramping up of COVID-19 testing in Russia to reach one of the highest levels in the world.

“As the experience of the world has shown, it was the unpreparedness and overwhelming of health care systems that became the main cause of high mortality. This did not allow those who could be helped to be saved. And we, again, can now provide such assistance,” Putin said.

Reporting its first COVID-19 case in March, Russia’s total reported infection rates have spiked to over 221,000 in the past two and a half months. As of Monday, the country’s coronavirus-related mortality rate is just 2,009, less than one percent of total infections, with most fatalities suffered by people over the age of 65 with prior health conditions.
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