Moscow launches mass COVID-19 vaccination program
Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin announced Friday the official start of a mass COVID-19 vaccination program in the Russian capital.
Residents are now able to sign up online to be vaccinated, and Sobyanin said some 5,000 people had registered in the first five hours since the launch.
"Teachers, doctors, social workers, those who today most of all risk their health and lives," the mayor wrote in a brief post on his blog Friday.
The announcement comes two days after Russian President Vladimir Putin unexpectedly ordered large-scale vaccination to start next week, despite earlier statements from the government saying the country has yet to produce enough vaccine doses to do so.
The mass inoculation campaigns will use Russia’s COVID-19 vaccine, called Sputnik V, which the health ministry controversially registered in August before starting crucial late-stage clinical trials. Vaccinations will be voluntary, with the drives first focusing on teachers and doctors.
Russia was still vaccinating volunteers as part of its phase 3 trial, which has so far only managed to inoculate 20,000 of a planned 40,000 people.
Putin has said that Russia will soon produce 2 million doses of Sputnik V, but it's unclear how many doses have been been produced so far and how many people will be able to be vaccinated from next week. The country has run into serious manufacturing hurdles and had to significantly cut its planned production from 30 million to 2 million by the end of the year.
ABC News' Patrick Reevell contributed to this report.