An arbitration court in the Sverdlovsk region has fined the Ural Instrument Making Plant 500,000 rubles ($6,500) for manufacturing faulty equipment after federal regulators discovered violations of licensing requirements in the production, maintenance, and circulation of medical devices.
The factory’s parent company, Concern Radio-Electronic Technologies (itself a Rostec subsidiary), announced in a press release that the plant has already resolved all regulatory violations, which it says were in no way connected to several “Aventa-M” artificial ventilators that caught fire at two hospitals in Russia and killed six people.
This is already the second time the Ural Instrument Making Plant has been fined for faulty production. Last month, the same court in the Sverdlovsk region penalized the company 100,000 rubles ($1,300) for separate violations of licensing requirements.
In April 2020, Russia shipped 45 Aventa-M ventilators to New York City as part of a humanitarian-aid exchange with the United States. Due to problems with power-supply conversion, the fires in Moscow and St. Petersburg, and the political toxicity of products manufactured by Concern Radio-Electronic Technologies (which is under U.S. economic sanctions), the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency ultimately discarded the devices.
Background
- Russian manufacturer says it refuses to believe news reports that America trashed the ventilators shipped to NYC in April
- U.S. reportedly violated its own anti-Russian sanctions by purchasing coronavirus medical aid
- A ventilator short circuiting caused a fire at a St. Petersburg hospital. A device from the same Russian manufacturer caught fire in a Moscow hospital three days ago.
Caught fire?
In May 2020, short circuits in “Aventa-M” ventilators reportedly caused deadly fires at two hospitals in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Regulators suspended the production of all Aventa-M machines until July, allowing manufacturing to resume only after additional safety inspections.