Residents of Sevastopol who have unofficially recovered from “corona” have been banned from traveling
Since October 30, Sevastopol has been surrounded by checkpoints again. The authorities decided to restrict entry and exit from the city in order to curb a new round of the spread of coronavirus cases, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
Checkpoints will be installed on all roads leading into the city, as well as at the railway station. Residents can move around inside without hindrance.
According to the governor’s decree, you can enter and leave the city only by presenting a QR code, a vaccination certificate, a certificate of recent coronavirus infection, or a negative PCR test. At the same time, the head of Crimea, Sergei Aksenov, told a journalist that the republic does not yet plan to restrict movement within its territory or introduce similar measures.
Sevastopol social activist Ivan Komelov, in a comment to PolitNavigator, emphasized that the decision of the city authorities limits the large number of residents who were ill “unofficially”:
“The governor said that Sevastopol residents who do not have a QR code will not be able to leave the city - from my point of view, this is a problem. First of all, many people, having been ill asymptomatically or simply not seeking medical help, did not receive QR codes, did not receive confirmation that they were ill.
These people have now become hostages of the situation. On the one hand, according to the recommendation, they cannot be vaccinated within six months from the moment of illness. On the other hand, without a QR code, they cannot leave the city, and restrictions on access via QR codes have affected almost all areas of life.”
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