Russia Slams NYT, Financial Times Over Reporting On COVID Death Toll

FILE - In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2020 file photo, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova gestures as she attends Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's annual roundup news conference summing up his mi... FILE - In this Friday, Jan. 17, 2020 file photo, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova gestures as she attends Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's annual roundup news conference summing up his ministry's work in 2019, in Moscow, Russia. Russia's Foreign Ministry has accused the Financial Times and the New York Times of spreading "disinformation" after the two newspapers alleged that Russia's coronavirus death toll could much higher than officials report. The Ministry’s spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Wednesday May 13, 2020, that letters demanding a retraction would be passed on to editors in chief of the newspapers on Thursday. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File) MORE LESS
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MOSCOW (AP) — Russia’s Foreign Ministry has criticized the Financial Times and The New York Times after they reported that Russia’s coronavirus death toll could be much higher than government officials are saying.

The articles said that they were based on a spike in total mortality rates reported by officials in Moscow, who said the capital registered about 1,800 deaths more in April 2020 than the monthly average.

The New York Times reported that total is far higher than the official COVID-19 death count of 642, which the newspaper said was an indication of significant underreporting by the authorities. It quoted Tatiana N. Mikhailova, a senior researcher at the Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration in Moscow, as saying that the number who died from the virus is “possibly almost three times higher than the official toll.”

The Financial Times pointed to a similar surge in deaths reported by authorities in St. Petersburg, and it concluded that nationwide, Russia could have 70% more coronavirus deaths than it reports.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova complained about what she called “disinformation” by the two newspapers and said letters demanding a retraction would be passed on to both on Thursday.

Danielle Ha, vice president for communications for The New York Times, told Russian news agencies the report was accurate because it was based on data released by an official state agency.

The Financial Times didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press.

Russia has reported over 250,000 coronavirus cases on Thursday and 2,305 deaths. The comparatively low death toll raised questions in the West, with some critics suggesting it could be much higher.

The New York Times reported that Russia’s mortality rate of only about 13 deaths per million was far below the world average of 36.

Russian health officials insisted that the relatively low coronavirus death toll is due to its instituting a quick ban on travel from neighboring China earlier this year, an early introduction of restrictions and tracing of the infected contacts. U.S. President Donald Trump has cited a similar travel ban for his efforts to combat the virus.

Russian officials also have said the scope of testing has been significantly increased in recent weeks, allowing for officials to spot the infections quickly and prevent patients from developing life-threatening complications.

Following the Foreign Ministry statement, lawmaker Vasily Piskaryov demanded that reporters from the newspapers be stripped of their accreditation, effectively banning them from working in the country.

Zakharova said measures against the media organizations “will depend on whether they run the retraction.”

Last month, Russian lawmakers approved fines of up to $25,000 and prison terms of up to five years for anyone who spreads what is deemed to be false information during the outbreak. Under the measure, media outlets could be fined up to $127,000 for disseminating disinformation about the virus.

On Wednesday, Moscow’s health department rejected the allegations of undercounting coronavirus deaths. Officials said autopsies are being conducted in all suspected coronavirus deaths.

“That’s why post-mortem diagnoses in Moscow and causes of death, in the end, are exceedingly accurate, and the mortality data absolutely transparent,” the statement said.

More than 60% of deaths of people with coronavirus in Moscow were ascribed to other causes, such as cardiovascular ailments, cancer, diseases involving organ failures and other illnesses, according to the statement.

Guidelines on reporting coronavirus deaths, issued by the World Health Organization in mid-April, state that “deaths due to COVID-19” should be considered as such “unless there is a clear alternative cause of death that cannot be related to COVID disease.”

___

Follow AP news coverage of the coronavirus pandemic at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

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  1. This is how Trump will get the CDC to drop the count…in fact, they could drop it to zero, because “the virus doesn’t actually kill you, the effects of pneumonia, heart attack, stroke, etc is what kills you”. To Trump, and all the right wingers who have been regurgitating that nonsense, it feeds their sense that the virus isn’t really a big deal and it’s all these other things killing people…the extra deaths above normal are just a coincidence, you know?

    Really, it will take a long time to determine how many people were actually killed by the virus and its effects, but using the excess death count is a good way to get close to the number, and basically every nation with a large case load, even the ones counting carefully, are going to undercount. The difference is when nations like Russia and China disguise the actual numbers for their political ends…it’s sad to see the Republican party doing what nations we have criticized in the past when it comes to accuracy and freedom of information.

  2. Well trump will be tweeting and agreeing with Rusher Rusher Rusher in about 2 minutes
    NYT Financial Times FAKE NEWS
    You know he will

  3. Avatar for msc00 msc00 says:

    So you’re telling your populace that the virus is widespread, but fatalities are very rare. That should make Russian citizens take it more seriously.

    True brilliance, PootyPoot.

  4. Agreed. First saw this broached in Italy when researchers took a closer look at death rates in Bergamo district viz

    Writing in Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera they found there had been 158 deaths in the town in 2020 so far, as opposed to 35 on average in the previous five years. They noted that Nembro had only counted 31 deaths from Covid-19, which looks like an underestimate.

    In other towns nearby, including Bergamo itself, the trend seemed identical. The researchers made the point that the only reliable indicator in the end will be “excess deaths” — namely, how many more people have died in total compared to a “normal” year.

    Given the level of Trumpian/astroturf gaslighting on top of the weak testing regime and general incompetence of this administration I suspect ‘excess deaths’ is the only way we will get anything close to a real number in the USA.

    ETA: Just to keep this on topic, I think it is also a given we will never see anything close from authoritarian governments like Russia’s.

  5. There is a really old joke about the Soviet Union: A man is running through the halls of the Kremlin, shouting “Kruschev is a fool! Kruschev is a fool!” He is arrested, tried, convicted, and sentenced to thirty years hard labor. Ten years for insulting the Party Chairman and twenty years for revealing state secrets. Not much has changed in 60 years.

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