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Coronavirus live news: AstraZeneca ‘pulls out of EU supply meeting’; Russia relaxes restrictions | World news


The coronavirus pandemic is on the decline in Moscow, Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Wednesday as he abolished some COVID-19 restrictions in the Russian capital, allowing bars, restaurants and nightclubs to open overnight.

He made the announcement in a blog post as Russia reported 17,741 new COVID-19 cases, taking its official tally to 3,774,672. Authorities also reported 594 deaths in the last 24 hours, pushing the death toll to 71,076.

New COVID-19 cases in Moscow have not exceeded 3,000 in the past week and more than 50% of beds in coronavirus hospitals were vacant for the first time since mid-June, Sobyanin wrote on his personal blog.




A view shows wards at the Krylatskoye Ice Palace, which was converted into a temporary hospital for people suffering from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Moscow last week.

A view shows wards at the Krylatskoye Ice Palace, which was converted into a temporary hospital for people suffering from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Moscow last week. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

Russia, which launched a voluntary vaccination programme with the Russian-made Sputnik V vaccine in December, has seen cases steadily fall in the last month, since a record daily rise on Dec. 24. It has resisted imposing a strict new lockdown, relying instead on targeted measures.

“The pandemic is on the decline and under the circumstances our duty is to create conditions for the quickest possible recovery of the economy,” said Sobyanin. “My warmest congratulations to you, friends, on our joint victory and one more step to a return to normal life in the beautiful city of Moscow.

The mayor lifted a ban on entertainment venues, including restaurants, bars and nightclubs, serving customers between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m., a measure that has been in place since Nov. 13.

He also said that businesses would no longer have to have at least 30% of employees working remotely.

“Please remember that the likelihood of being infected with coronavirus, though reduced, still exists. The fight is not yet over. We still should exercise caution,” Sobyanin said.

Measures requiring state-run universities to operate remotely, with distanced learning for students, would be reviewed on Feb. 6, Sobyanin said. The requirement for citizens to wear masks in shops and on public transport remains.



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