Which regions have introduced the most severe restrictions on non-working days. Map

Which regions have introduced the most severe restrictions on non-working days. Map
Photo is illustrative in nature. From open sources.
From October 30, non-working days introduced due to covid-19 began in RUSSIA . In Moscow, the region and other subjects, lockdowns have been introduced for the period of “holidays”. Which regions went to the most stringent restrictions - in the material of RBC

Against the background of records for daily detected cases of CORONAVIRUS and the number of deaths due to COVID-19, President Vladimir Putin declared non-working days in the country from October 30 to November 7 and gave the regions the right to extend this period. Some regions have decided to go on coronavirus "holidays" earlier. In six of them - in the Voronezh, Nizhny Novgorod, Novgorod, Kursk, Samara regions and the Perm Territory - non-working days began on October 25.

Which regions decided to extend non-working days

So far, five subjects have increased the duration of non-working days. The first of these was the Novgorod region , where organizations will not work until Friday, November 12, inclusive, and weekends fall on Saturday and Sunday. Until the end of next Friday, non-working days will remain in the Chelyabinsk and Kursk regions ; in the Smolensk region  - until November 10, in the Tomsk region - until November 15. On November 3, the government of the Bryansk region announced that it had not extended the regime of non-working days until November 14, and for another week - from November 8 - there are restrictions on the work of most organizations.

Moscow and the Moscow region decided not to introduce additional non-working days. The Kaliningrad region does not plan to extend them either.

For residents of Moscow and the Moscow region, the non-working period will last 11 days. At this time, the capital region announced the mass closure of organizations, including non-food retail, catering and fitness centers. The measures came into force on 28 October.