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Party down Moscow introduced QR codes to track nightclub hipsters, but the system can also identify owners, including the prime minister’s sister

Source: Meduza

In light of the coronavirus pandemic, those wishing to party in Moscow at night now need to register a phone number with the city’s contact tracing monitor by scanning a QR code or texting 7377 (from 1 a.m. to 6 a.m., specifically). As it turns out, these QR codes currently reveal the legal entities behind Moscow’s nightlife.

Over the weekend, Meduza special correspondent Ivan Golunov drew attention to a post on the Telegram channel Antiglyanets — it shared a screenshot of an Instagram story by Russian fashion Denis Simachev, which showed a message confirming registration through one of these QR codes. The confirmation message included not only the name of the restaurant he was going to, “Simach v Nedalnem,” but also the name of the legal entity that owns it: Nikoliya LLC. 

Denis Simachev’s confirmation message

According to Spark-Interfax, Nikoliya LLC was registered as a legal entity in 2014; Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin’s sister Nataliya Stenina and her husband, businessman Alexander Udodov, own a 25 percent stake in the company. Restaurateur Arkady Novikov owns 50 percent. 

The restaurant in question used to be called “Nedalny Vostok” — it was a favorite watering hole for Russian officials until it closed in 2019. In August 2020, a new restaurant and bar was opened at the same location: “Simach v Nedalnem.” 

According to a Meduza source in the Moscow Mayor’s Office, the QR code contact tracing system is being changed so as not to display legal entities. 

The Simach v Nedalnem restaurant and bar is located at 2–15 Tverskoy Boulevard in Moscow. In case you’re curious, it looks like this: