On 30 March, a case was confirmed in a person who arrived from Moscow, Russia. The test, however, was conducted in Zugdidi, Georgia, where the patient is being treated. Abkhazia itself had no confirmed cases at the time.
April 2020
On 7 April, the first case was confirmed. The infected patient arrived in Gagra, Abkhazia's westernmost town, after having returned from a trip to Moscow. Later, on 8 April, the second case was confirmed, caused by the first case. On 11 April, a third case was confirmed, caused by the first two cases. On 26 April, the first death from the virus was confirmed in Gudauta. The patient was the third confirmed case back on 11 April.
May 2020
On 8 May, four more cases were confirmed, all being cadets from Russian military academies who arrived in Sukhumi several days before and were undergoing quarantine, bringing the total of confirmed cases to seven. The following day, two more cases were confirmed, both also being cadets, bringing the total to nine. On 11 May, one more case was confirmed, bringing the total to 10. On 12 May, three more cases were confirmed, bringing the total to 13. On 13 May, two more cases were confirmed, bringing the total to 15. Two more cases were confirmed on 14 May, one being a Russian university student, and the other being a serviceman from Dagestan stationed in Gudauta, bringing the total to 17. On 17 May, a family of three tested positive for the virus in Sokhumi, bringing the total to 20. On 19 May, four more people tested positive, all Russian students who had recently returned to Abkhazia, bringing the total to 24. On 20 May, one more case was confirmed in a cadet at a Russian military academy, bringing the total to 25. On 22 May, three more cases were confirmed, all in cadets from Russian military academies, bringing the total to 28.
June 2020
As of 9 June, 36 cases had been identified, eight of which had been hospitalized.
Response
Abkhazia is a disputed territory in the South Caucasus, recognised by Russia and a few other countries as an independent state, but regarded by most of international actors as part of Georgia, which consider the area—together with fellow breakaway entity South Ossetia—as Russian-occupied territory. Early in the pandemic, senior Georgian government officials called on the WHO and other international organisations to provide support to people living in the two breakaways. They said Georgia would not block movement to and from the regions. Unlike South Ossetia, Abkhazia cooperated to a degree with Georgia, allowing dozens of people to make use of medical services in the Tbilisi-controlled territory, and with international organisations, with the UN Development Programme providing much-needed basic medical supplies and sanitisers. Russia supplied some 500 COVID-19 test kits and sent soldiers to support disinfection of public places. A curfew was in place for nearly a month but was eased late in April 2020. According to the International Crisis Group, the situation in Abkhazia presents several vulnerabilities. Abkhazia suffers from weak infrastructure and underequipped medical facilities, lacks medical professionals and has an ageing population, with nearly 20% of residents over 60 years of age. Nearly 80% of medical personnel are themselves at high risk, being in their 60s or older.