Moscow Reopens Museums and Terraces as it Is Rolling Back Coronavirus Restrictions

The deadly virus outbreak has created a major stir around the world in recent times claiming the lives of more than 437,000 people worldwide

Muscovites returned back to the museums and the restaurant roofs on Tuesday for the first time in over two months as the capital of Russia rolled back more coronavirus or COVID-19 restrictions despite still confirming more than 1,000 cases daily.

The libraries and zoos in the city of almost 13 million people were also resuming, albeit with the limits on numbers. Dentists got back to business too and sports events were allowed, though venues had 10 percent capacity limits.

Kremlin critics have accused the authorities of lifting restrictions too fast to pave the way for a nationwide vote on reforms that would allow President Vladimir Putin to run again for president twice after 2024 when his current term ends. Voting will take place over a seven-day period, culminating on July 1. The Kremlin has denied decisions to ease curbs were politically motivated.

Moscow Started Relaxing COVID-19 Lockdowns Last Week

Coronavirus
Peng Zhiyong (C), head of the department of critical care medicine of Zhongnan Hospital, performs diagnosis on a patient with his colleagues in Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University in Wuhan, central China's Hubei Province, Jan. 24, 2020. Central China's Hubei province reported 105 new confirmed cases of pneumonia caused by the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) and seven new deaths on Thursday, the provincial health authorities announced Friday. (Xinhua/Xiong Qi/IANS) IANS

Moscow began to lift its lockdown last week, allowing residents to leave homes and use public transport and vehicles without restrictions. City mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Monday it was time to further ease restrictions because the pandemic was on the wane and pressure on the city's health system was easing.

In central Moscow on Tuesday, restaurant owners were eagerly tidying up their terraces but remained wary about the impact on sales of having to serve fewer customers. "The restaurant economy revolves around seats," said Dmitry Nesterenko, general manager of Laduree Russia, a branch of the French luxury bakery.

A restaurant quarter near Moscow's Belorusskaya train stations that caters for office workers was doing a brisk trade on Tuesday lunchtime with its terraces full of people eating and drinking in the sunshine. Other terraces in the city were less full though, and some restaurants were still in the process of erecting wooden pavement terraces.

Moscow has been the worst-affected area in Russia, which has the third-highest number of cases in the world with more than half a million infections. Moscow has recorded 208,680 cases and 3,386 deaths, while the nation as a whole has registered 7,284 deaths - fewer than numerous other countries. Critics are dubious about the accuracy of Russia's mortality figures.

(With agency inputs)

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