Putin rejects mandatory Covid jabs as Russia sees record deaths
MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday said he was opposed to mandatory coronavirus vaccinations for Russians but urged the jab-sceptic population to get inoculated as his country battles a deadly third wave.
Putin was addressing Russians during his annual televised phone-in session, answering questions posed live on air and in recorded videos, with more than two million questions sent in. The topics touched on everything from rising food prices to relations with foreign powers, but the beginning was dedicated to Russia´s most immediate concern: a surging outbreak.
"Preventing the further spread of the epidemic is possible only with the help of vaccination," Putin said. As the phone-in kicked off, a government tally showed 669 virus fatalities over 24 hours -- a pandemic high for the second day in a row.
Russia has since mid-June been hit with a third wave driven by the highly transmissible Delta variant first identified in India, and worsened by a sluggish inoculation drive. Although free jabs have been available since early December, only around 15 percent of Russia´s population had received at least one dose as of Wednesday, according to the Gogov website, which tallies Covid figures from the regions.
The slow uptake prompted Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin earlier this month to order mandatory jabs for service sector employees, with more than a dozen regions in Russia since following suit.
Polls show that a majority of Russians oppose receiving coronavirus jabs, and the widening policy prompted concerns that all citizens would eventually be required to be vaccinated.
But Putin shot that idea down. "I do not support mandatory vaccinations," he said. He nonetheless called on Russians not to skip the jab. "It is necessary to listen, not to people who understand little about this and spread rumours, but to specialists," he said.
Putin also addressed concerns about the country´s homegrown jabs, with surveys showing that Russians are sceptical of them in particular. Saying that he had himself received the Sputnik V jab, Putin claimed that Russia´s vaccines were better than foreign alternatives.
Throughout the phone-in Putin did not stray far from geopolitics, addressing Russia´s relations with Ukraine and a spat with Britain over its warship passing by Crimea last week. He also quipped that Russia did indeed have hackers, after a broadcaster blamed repeated technical difficulties on cyberattacks. But the dominant topics were related to domestic affairs, with questions in particular on economic matters.
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