The Russian consumer health watchdog
Rospotrebnadzor advised tourists to refrain from visiting Wuhan and stay away from Chinese zoos and markets selling animals and seafood. The agency also said that development of a vaccine against the virus was underway, relying on the WHO's recommendations. A total of 144 Russians were evacuated from
Wuhan, the initial centre of the outbreak, and were quarantined in
Tyumen Oblast for two weeks from 5 February. On 24 March,
Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin told President Putin at a meeting that "a serious situation is unfolding" and that the relatively low number of confirmed cases could be due to a low level of testing, saying that "there are far more people who are infected" and that the number of people in Moscow suspected of having the coronavirus was about 500. A number of venues and parks in Russia including Crocus Expo,
Exhibition of Achievements of National Economy and
Patriot Park in Moscow and Lenexpo in
Saint Petersburg were turned into temporary hospitals.
Testing On 24 January, the first testing systems were developed and deployed to laboratories around the country. As of 23 March, Russia had 4 testing systems and had carried out over 165 thousand tests for the virus which is among the highest testing numbers in the world. Two private lab companies started testing on 26 March. According to Deputy Prime Minister
Tatyana Golikova, as of 25 March 141 state laboratories were conducting tests in 79 federal subjects. There are plans to increase the number of reference centres across the country to 15. On 27 March, the
Federal Service for Surveillance in Healthcare (Roszdravnadzor) registered two more test systems. In Moscow on 21 March the average of those tested was low at 35 years and starting to rise to 37–39 years. On 9 April, Russia passed the 1 million test mark and in addition to the laboratories of Rospotrebnadzor 200 state medical laboratories and 22 private laboratories are carrying out testing. There is a drive to further expand testing with any laboratory being able to carry out tests by submitting a notification to the central website. On 27 April, Russia passed the 3 million test mark. On 28 April
Anna Popova head of
Federal Service for Surveillance in Healthcare (Roszdravnadzor) in a presidential update stated that there were now 506 laboratories testing and that 45% of those tested have no symptoms with the number having pneumonia reducing from 25% to 20% and only 5% of patients with a severe form. 40% of infections were from family members. The speed of people reporting illness has improved from 6 days to the day people find symptoms. Antibody testing was carried out on 3,200 Moscow doctors and 20% have immunity. Russia continued to have the 2nd highest rate of testing in the world with 4.1m tests at 3 May, 5.2m tests at 9 May, 6.1m tests at 14 May, 7.1m tests on 18 May, 9m tests on 26 May and 10m tests on 29 May. Dr. Melita Vujnovic, the
World Health Organization's representative in Russia, stated that Russia, in accordance with WHO recommendations, "started testing literally at the end of January." Coronavirus testing in Russia was provided by the
State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology VECTOR in
Novosibirsk and had to be verified there. There was concern that the tests may have insufficient sensitivity,
Travel and entry restrictions on 1 April On 23 January, the Russian city of
Blagoveshchensk, near the
Chinese border, limited access to the country.
Cultural exchange and official visits to China were cancelled. The Governors of the
Amur Oblast Vasily Orlov, and of the
Penza Oblast Ivan Belozertsev, called on residents to abandon trips to China altogether. Residents of large cities were told to avoid contact with tourists from China. On 31 January, Deputy Prime Minister
Tatyana Golikova said Russia will restrict the entry of foreigners arriving from China, except for flights to
Moscow Sheremetyevo Airport. On 20 February, the entry of
Chinese citizens was banned. The temporary suspension is for Chinese citizens entering Russia for employment, private, educational and tourist purposes. Prime Minister
Mikhail Mishustin announced that
the border with
Belarus has been closed for the movement of people and an entry ban for foreigners will be imposed from 18 March to 1 May. On 17 March,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Russian embassies and consulates had stopped issuing all types of visas, including e-visas, with exceptions for diplomats, people attending funerals and transit passengers. On 23 March, Russia restricted
air travel from all over the world, except for certain flights from Moscow to major capitals, and charter flights intended to move foreign citizens to their respective countries and
Russian nationals back to Russia, until everyone is evacuated. On 25 March, the Russian government loosened the travel ban to allow the entry for relatives of Russian citizens. All regular and charter international flights were suspended on 27 March, except for those aimed at bringing Russians home. On the same day,
Grozny Airport refused to receive passengers without permanent or temporary registration in Chechnya. Following a request from the
Government of Moscow,
BlaBlaCar carpooling service decided to suspend its activities across Russia starting from 30 March. On 28 March, the Russian government decided to close all automobile, railway, pedestrian, river, or other
border checkpoints, including on the
Belarus border, with exceptions similar to that of the air travel restrictions. The ban must be enforced on 30 March., 48% of Russian respondents said that they disapproved of
Vladimir Putin's handling of the coronavirus pandemic.
Other measures and Moscow Mayor
Sergey Sobyanin visited the Coronavirus Monitoring Centre on 17 March. located in the gym of school No. 1409On 14 and 15 March,
Ministry of Education and
Ministry of Science and Higher Education recommended regions to adopt
distance learning if it becomes necessary. On 17 March,
Ministry of Culture announced closing all cultural institutions under its jurisdiction, including museums, theatres, symphonies, and circuses. On the same day, President Vladimir Putin said that the situation was "generally under control". On 18 March,
Minister of Education Sergey Kravtsov announced that all Russian schools would be closed from 23 March to 12 April. Russian courts stopped considering all but most urgent cases because of the pandemic until 10 April. On 24 March, the Russian government adopted a number of decisions, including an instruction to regional authorities to suspend activities of any
nightclubs, cinemas, children's entertainment centres, and to ban
hookah smoking at any restaurants or cafes. The
Central Bank recommended all the banks to keep the money for 3–4 days before giving it to clients or loading it into ATMs, and to restrict usage of cash recycling ATMs. On 25 March, President Putin, in a
televised address to the nation, announced that the
2020 Russian constitutional referendum would be postponed due to the coronavirus. He added that the next week would be a nationwide paid holiday and urged Russians to stay at home. Putin also announced a list of measures of
social protection, support for
small and medium-sized enterprises, and changes in
fiscal policy. On 26 March,
Minister of Science and Higher Education Valery Falkov ordered all universities to close from 28 March to 5 April. On 27 March, as a follow-up to Putin's address to the nation, Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin
ordered all reservations at
pensions or
holiday houses to be cancelled from 28 March to 1 June, recommended regional authorities to close all the
pistes at resorts for the same period, instructed them to force all the public eating places (except for delivery services) to suspend activities from 28 March to 5 April, and recommended that citizens refrain from travelling. On the same day, the Ministry of Education announced the postponement of the
Unified State Exam from the end of May to the beginning of June. On 30 March, as Moscow and Moscow Oblast declared a lockdown, Mishustin urged all regions to follow the example and take similar measures. He also announced a bill that would raise fines for breaching quarantine requirements. On 31 March, the
Federal Assembly approved a law allowing the
executive cabinet to declare a state of emergency on its own. Previously, only a commission led by the
Minister of Emergency Situations could do that. On 1 April, Prime Minister Mishustin and the
Minister of Communications Maxut Shadayev announced creating a system of tracking quarantine violation based on data of
mobile network operators. Violators will receive a text message, and if they breach it systematically, the information will be sent to the police. On 2 April, President Putin extended the non-working period to 30 April.
Lockdowns On 28 March, Chechen authorities urged the population of the republic to stay at their places of permanent residence, and banned entry to
Grozny for anyone except emergency services, food supplies, government officials, police, and journalists. On the next day,
Chechnya closed its borders, with a full lockdown coming into effect on 30 March. On 29 March, Moscow issued a
stay-at-home order for all residents starting on 30 March. Muscovites were not allowed to leave their homes except in cases of emergency medical care and other threats to life and health, to travel to work for those who are obliged to, to make purchases in the nearest shop or pharmacy, to walk pets at a distance not exceeding 100 metres from the place of residence, as well as to take out the garbage. People were instructed to keep a distance of 1.5 metres from other people. Those recently unemployed will receive 19,500 rubles a month. After that, a similar regime was introduced in Moscow Oblast at 20:00
MSK on 29 March. Senator
Andrey Klishas, chair of the Federation Council Committee on constitutional legislation and state construction, criticised this decision, saying that such restrictions are the exclusive competence of the
Federal Assembly and the
President. On 30 March, similar orders were announced in
Adygea, the
Komi Republic,
Mari El,
Tatarstan,
Chuvashia, some districts of
Yakutia,
Arkhangelsk,
Astrakhan,
Belgorod,
Irkutsk,
Kaliningrad,
Kursk,
Lipetsk,
Murmansk,
Nizhny Novgorod,
Novgorod,
Ryazan,
Saratov,
Sverdlovsk,
Ulyanovsk and
Vologda oblasts, the cities of
Bryansk and Saint Petersburg.
Leningrad Oblast banned movement of people between districts and introduced a lockdown in the town of
Murino. On 31 March, the "self-isolation regime" was announced in republics of
Altai,
Bashkortostan,
Buryatia,
Dagestan,
Ingushetia,
Kabardino-Balkaria,
Kalmykia,
Karachay-Cherkessia,
Karelia,
Khakassia,
Mordovia,
Udmurtia and
Tuva,
Altai,
Khabarovsk (for those over 65),
Krasnodar,
Krasnoyarsk,
Perm,
Primorsky,
Stavropol and
Zabaykalsky krais,
Bryansk,
Chelyabinsk,
Kaluga,
Kemerovo,
Kirov,
Kostroma,
Kurgan,
Magadan,
Novosibirsk,
Omsk,
Penza,
Pskov (for those over 65),
Rostov,
Sakhalin,
Samara,
Smolensk,
Tambov,
Tomsk,
Vladimir,
Volgograd,
Voronezh and
Yaroslavl oblasts,
Khanty-Mansi and
Yamalo-Nenets autonomous okrugs, the
Jewish Autonomous Oblast, the city of
Sevastopol. Republics of Yakutia and Karelia limited the sale of alcohol. On 1 April, the "self-isolation regime" was announced in the disputed territory of
Crimea and
Sevastopol, the republic of
North Ossetia–Alania,
Kamchatka and Khabarovsk krais,
Ivanovo and
Orenburg oblasts. On 2 April, the measures were announced in
Amur Oblast (for those over 65),
Tyumen Oblast, and
Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. On 3 April, the measures were announced in
Oryol Oblast and
Tula Oblast (for those over 65).
Medical supervision Russia has regularly reported the number of people under medical supervision because they were suspected of having the virus. • On 25 April 168,000 people • On 26 April 170,000 people • On 27 April 183,000 people On 8 May 292,000 people were under medical surveillance. On 9 May 242,000 people were under medical surveillance. • Ventilator production increased from 60 to 70 per month to over 800 in April and 2,500 in May • Face masks from 800,000 per day to 8.5m in April • Protective suits for doctors from 3,000 per day to 100,000 per day by end of April and 150,000 per day by mid-May Additional production was required and the Ministry of Industry and Trade was given the task to further increase daily production. On 15 June 2020,
Human Rights Watch documented that healthcare workers in Russia were facing threats and reprisal from employers and law enforcement. The medical workers were being targeted for speaking about lack of adequate
personal protective equipment (PPE) to safely treat suspected patients and prevent the spread of
COVID-19. , Russia.
QR-code mandate On November 15, 2021 due to a surge of number of COVID-19 cases Russian government submitted several bills to
Gosduma to force businesses to verify QR-code passes obtained by citizens in order to prove vaccination before granting them access to mass public events, restaurants, retailers, and cultural institutions, as well as trains and planes. Several cities and regions have reportedly enacted similar decrees earlier in November. == Local measures ==