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What closes and what remains open in the following decree it was the object of Conte’s speech to the Chamber of Deputies. The upswing in positives forces the government to intervene a few days after the last measure: they are necessary more restrictive measures me new closures.
You will no longer be able to go to museums, exhibitions, betting rooms and the weekend in Mall, while hairdressers, beauty centers and clothing stores remain open (except for more restrictive measures at the regional level). The operation of supermarkets, pharmacies, kiosks and tobacconists is guaranteed even if the national curfew is about to start from 20/21. The following explains what is closed throughout Italy and what, on the other hand, is open with the entry into force of the DPCM that comes tomorrow.
Malls
New squeeze across Italy for shopping centers: the closure imposed by the new Prime Minister’s Decree is not total but is limited to Saturdays, Sundays and national holidays. Indoor shopping centers and galleries will remain open only supermarkets, pharmacies, parapharmacies and tobacconists.
Museums and exhibitions
The exhibitions and museums had been “saved” by the Decree of the Prime Minister of October 24, but as of November 4 Conte ordered their closure nationwide, as was already planned for cinemas and theaters. Places of culture, in fact, are an opportunity for social gathering.
Some regions are also closed
To close there are not only the shopping centers and museums, but also the regions with higher risk, those in which the Rt index has exceeded the 1.5 threshold entering the so-called “Scenario 4”. Conte explained that in the next DPCM there will be differentiated measures between the areas most affected and those with less risk; In other words, the country will be divided into three bands corresponding to three different levels of danger– The more the virus spreads, the more drastic the measures taken will be.
This means travel limits to and from the regions with the most cases, such as Lombardy, Campania, Lazio, Valle d’Aosta and Piedmont. In addition, governors can impose the closure of the (few) commercial activities that remain open in the national framework or limit their hours.
What is still open
Throughout Italy, bars, discos, pizzerias and restaurants remain open until 18.00, clothing stores, supermarkets, pharmacies and parapharmacies, newsagents, tobacconists, beauty centers and hairdressers. The regions, however, are free to impose time limits or the total closure of activities considered dangerous to public health.