Russia sets new record daily COVID death toll

Russia is battling a severe third wave of COVID-19, driven by the highly infectious Delta variant.

People wait in line to get a coronavirus vaccine at a vaccination center in Sokolniki Park in Moscow [File: Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP]

Russia reported 752 coronavirus deaths on Saturday, a national record of pandemic-related fatalities over a 24-hour period, as the country battles a third wave of the coronavirus.

Russia has now set seven new pandemic highs for coronavirus deaths in the last 12 days as it fights a surging outbreak driven by the highly infectious Delta variant and a sluggish vaccination campaign.

The country’s official virus caseload passed 5.75 million on Saturday, making it the fifth-worst-hit nation worldwide, according to an AFP news agency tally.

As of Saturday, just 18.9 million of Russia’s population of some 146 million people had been fully vaccinated, according to the Gogov website, which tallies coronavirus data from the regions.

In Moscow, the epicentre of Russia’s outbreak, just 1.8 million of the city’s some 12 million people had been fully vaccinated despite free jabs having been available since December.

Scepticism

Authorities have faced a vaccine-sceptic population, with an independent poll this week showing that 54 percent of Russians do not plan on getting a COVID-19 jab.

Fred Weir, a correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor in Moscow, told Al Jazeera: “It’s a bit of a savage irony that Russia’s establishment was able to produce a pretty good vaccine and do it early on, but they’ve completely failed to convince the population to take it.

“Vaccination rates here are an abysmal 16 percent, far behind most developed countries. Even in Moscow, where there is a much more educated, cosmopolitan population, the rate is only around 20 percent or so.

“The government is trying to do everything it can to get people vaccinated, but Russians are somewhat reticent.”

According to Weir, scepticism is high among older citizens, who mistrust the state. “The majority of the older population, who are the most vulnerable, are refusing to do it,” said Weir.

Moscow picking up

Despite the challenge, the pace of the vaccination drive has nonetheless picked up after Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin last month mandated that 60 percent of service industry workers must be fully inoculated by mid-August, with a number of Russian regions since following suit.

On Friday, Sobyanin said 3.5 million Muscovites will have received at least their first dose of a vaccine by the end of the weekend.

The mayor has also ordered offices in the Russian capital to send home a third of their unvaccinated employees and restaurants to allow inside only patrons who have been vaccinated or infected in the past six months.

The Kremlin, however, has rejected mandatory vaccinations for all groups of the population as well as suggestions of reimposing a nationwide lockdown.

With 142,253 deaths from the virus, Russia has the highest official coronavirus toll in Europe – even as authorities have been accused of downplaying the severity of the country’s outbreak.

Under a broader definition for deaths linked to the coronavirus, statistics agency Rosstat at the end of April said that Russia has seen at least 270,000 fatalities.

Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies