— Hungarian health authorities have approved Russia's coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V, the government said Sunday. Starting Thursday, Moscow residents aged 65 and older will be ordered to self-isolate at home. — 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. Russian doctors mistrustful of official coronavirus data have. — The Kremlin has started checking the body temperatures of individuals attending events with President Vladimir Putin, spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. — Moscow's coronavirus death rate will be "significantly" higher in May than it was in April, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. — 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. — 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. 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. — 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 ministry said there are a small number of exceptions, including for diplomats and people attending funerals of close relatives in Russia. — A 69-year-old woman suspected of being infected with coronavirus has died in Moscow's Infectious Diseases Hospital No. — 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 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. — 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. Two more batches of the vaccine are to be delivered by Feb. 18 and 28. Older students will continue to attend classes remotely for at least two more weeks. — 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. — Starting today, coronavirus tests will be available for free in St. Petersburg, city health officials said. One person died after a fire broke out in a hospital treating coronavirus patients in northern Moscow, forcing an evacuation, emergencies officials said. Its press service said that 40 inmates have tested positive for the virus nationwide. Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin's cabinet, to unveil a slew of new economic and regulatory measures to, reduce the coronavirus' impact on Wednesday, including c, reating an anti-crisis fund of 300 billion rubles ($4.05 billion) to support Russian citizens and the Russian economy and c. ompensating quarantined citizens, including freelancers and the self-employed, for lost income. the Church resisted calls to close its doors despite the Moscow mayor's advice to the public to avoid church services. — President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping discussed the coronavirus by phone and agreed to deepen cooperation on developing pharmaceuticals, the Kremlin said. Coronavirus patients currently occupy 20% of all intensive care beds in the country. — 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. — 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. ", AFP: "Boy scout saves Maldives president from assassination", "Four killed in ‘assassination attempt’ on Dutch royal family", "Motives Behind Attack On Uzbek Imam Remain Unclear", "Woman, 21, arrested over stabbing of Labour MP", "Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords Shot in the Head", "Witnesses: Tribal fighters take over major city in Yemen", "Indian City of Patna Targeted as Bombings Kill Five", "Breaking: Wike escapes assassination attempt", "How a Taliban Assassin Got Close Enough to Kill a General", "Senador Cid Gomes tenta entrar em batalhão da polícia com retroescavadeira e é baleado" ("Senator Cid Gomes tries to enter police battalion with backhoe and gets shot"), "Explicit threat against Trudeau and an arsenal of loaded guns make Rideau Hall attack look like assassination attempt", https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_people_who_survived_assassination_attempts&oldid=1007202291, Wikipedia indefinitely semi-protected pages, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. — Russia has conducted more than 795,000 coronavirus tests so far, the federal consumer protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor said. Production will be stopped from March 30 to April 10 at its car plant in Kaluga and assembly line in Nizhny Novgorod. — Members of Russia’s ruling elite have been given access to an experimental coronavirus vaccine as early as April, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed sources. 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. — 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. — 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. — A Russian Orthodox Church spokesperson said it will not be closing churches or canceling religious proceedings. The statement follows recommendations issued by the Rospotrebnadzor head Anna Popova who advised recipients to avoid alcohol and immunosuppressants for 42 days. — Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied reports that President Vladimir Putin is preparing an address to the nation about the coronavirus. — 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. — Russian schools will go on a three-week vacation from March 23 to April 12 to prevent the spread of coronavirus, Education Minister Sergei Kravtsov said. — 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. 10,699 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 187,859. U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday offered to send ventilators to Russia. According to official statistics, there have been 3,371 coronavirus infections and just 29 deaths from Covid-19 in the region. — Moscow will suspend flights between Russia and South Korea from March 1 over coronavirus fears, except those operated by Aeroflot and Aurora, Golikova said. has called on believers to avoid churches as the coronavirus spreads. — 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. Moscow has 13,002 coronavirus cases as of Tuesday. — The Russian protection watchdog Rospotrebnadzor confirmed the first community transmission of the coronavirus in Russia, RBC reported, but this information was later removed from Rospotrebnadzor's statement. — Moscow is changing the way it counts its coronavirus cases. — 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. 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.". — Russian Communist Party members distributed anti-vaccination leaflets in Moscow, the Podyom Telegram news channel reported Wednesday. 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, Around 2,000 Moscow doctors have either recovered from or are currently ill with Covid-19, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. — 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. Football's 2020 European Championship has been postponed for a year because of the outbreak of the coronavirus, the Norwegian and Swedish FAs said on Tuesday. Russia confirmed 13,447 new coronavirus cases and 480 deaths. — 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. — For the first time since Aug. 15, more than 5,000 people were infected with coronavirus in Russia on Friday (5,100). — 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. — 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. — 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. — 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. — 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. — 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. Workers at medical institutions, defense agencies, Rosatom and Roscosmos are exempt from the new rules. — 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. George the Third. — The Russian Embassy in the United States advised Russian citizens to return home due to the possibility that the U.S. could close all its airports to slow the spread of coronavirus there. Russia has given preliminary approval for its Covid-19 Sputnik V vaccine to be manufactured in Serbia, a minister said on Friday. The app's release date is yet to be confirmed. — President Vladimir Putin announced a new package of measures to support Russia’s businesses hit by the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic. Forty-six contracted the coronavirus over the last month. — One person died after a fire broke out in a hospital treating coronavirus patients in northern Moscow, forcing an evacuation, emergencies officials said. Over 21% percent of respondents said they prefer to receive a foreign-made vaccine instead of Russia's homegrown jab. We wouldn’t be able to produce this crucial journalism without the support of our loyal readers. — 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 prisoners, students and military personnel will produce medical masks and other equipment as the country faces down the coronavirus pandemic, the RBC news website, — Employees of the presidential administration and journalists covering President Vladimir Putin's upcoming trips are being tested for coronavirus, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, — Journalists accredited with foreign media outlets have been barred from the Russian State Duma over the coronavirus, BBC Russian correspondent Pyotr Kozlov, — Moscow's network of facial recognition cameras has detected more than 200 people who violated orders to self-quarantine because they might be infected with the virus, the city's police chief Oleg Baranov. — Moscow confirmed more than 1,000 coronavirus cases for the first time since June 23. — 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. — Russia has closed Bolshevik revolutionary Vladimir Lenin's tomb on Moscow's Red Square to the public, the Kremlin guard service said, making it the latest Russian tourist attraction to shut down amid coronavirus fears. 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. — Moscow will start constructing temporary hospitals that will hold a total of 10,000 beds for coronavirus patients, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said. — Russian tourists in Europe are trapped abroad as flights have been canceled and borders closed due to the coronavirus crisis, a spokeswoman for Russia’s travel industry union told Interfax. A growing number of Chinese nationals have returned from Russia with the virus, threatening a new outbreak in the country where the pandemic originated. 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. — The Ivanovo region is experiencing a shortage of mortuary cabinets amid a growing number of coronavirus deaths. — 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. Friday in an interview with the Rossiya-1 television channel. — Russian Railways announced it would stop international passenger trains from Moscow to Berlin and Paris. — Migrant workers were almost twice as likely as Russians to lose their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic, new, — A Moscow election official infected with the coronavirus administered votes during Russia’s weeklong plebiscite on constitutional changes, the Dozhd television channel, — Former Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev has recovered from the coronavirus two weeks after testing positive, his spokesman. Wednesday. — 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. in the period from Dec. 30 until Jan. 10. — 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. — Belarus became the first country to register Russia's Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, Belarus state-run BELTA news agency reported Monday. — Authorities in Moscow will start monitoring the movements of all people showing coronavirus symptoms using their cellphone geolocation data. — 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. — Russia's consumer safety watchdog recommended that people avoid public transport, shopping malls and other public places at rush hour as a precaution against the coronavirus. He added that less than 1% of recorded cases were reinfections. — Kazakhstan will start producing Russia's Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine from Dec. 22, the country's President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said Friday. The ban will be in force from 20 December and does not apply to passengers using air transport. 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. — 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. — Former Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev has recovered from the coronavirus two weeks after testing positive, his spokesman said. 7,933 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 114,431 and marking a new one-day record increase. The app, called Gosuslugi.COVID Treker, alerts users of possible exposure to the coronavirus using the Exposure Notification system developed by Apple and Google. In Moscow, medical students have been deployed to hospitals strained by the pandemic. Rev. — 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. They are the first positive Covid-19 cases to be confirmed from among Russia’s 450-seat State Duma. — Russia confirmed 6,198 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s official number of cases to 87,147. This was up from the 7,463 seen in August, which marked a lull in the number of reported infections across the country. — 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. — Moscow is setting up 44 temporary hospitals which will treat up to 10,000 coronavirus patients, deputy mayor Pyotr Biryukov said. — A mutated version of the coronavirus strain that causes Covid-19 has been discovered in Siberia, Rospotrebnadzor head Anna Popova said Tuesday. — Bahrain's National Health Regulatory Authority gave emergency authorization to Russia's Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine, The Russian Direct Investment Fund confirmed Wednesday. The percentage is based on data collated from vaccinations of the public rather than from the vaccine's ongoing Phase 3 trials, Reuters reported. — 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 medical university in Moscow says it has completed clinical trials of the world’s first coronavirus vaccine using human volunteers. Earlier, the Church resisted calls to close its doors despite the Moscow mayor's advice to the public to avoid church services. — 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. — 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. Muslims across Russia on the Eid al-Fitr holiday, a feast marking the end of the month-long fast of Ramadan. The Kremlin also called such measures "excessive.". Russia's coronavirus jab has been approved by a total of 27 countries. All non-food shops and some service sector businesses will be able to re-open, he said. — Russians who have received the coronavirus vaccine will be provided with immunity passports, Health Minister Mikhail Murashko announced. — Sobyanin signed a law imposing fines on Muscovites found to be violating the city's self-isolation orders. — Russia’s April 22 public vote on a package of constitutional amendments will be postponed until after the coronavirus outbreak is under control, President Vladimir Putin said in an address to the nation.
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