Premier Mario Draghi on Monday
proposed to the government's COVID 'control room' to push back
the virus-containing curfew from 10 to 11 pm shortly, pushing it
further back to midnight from June 7, and ending it completely
from June 21, government sources said.
There will be no more curfew from June 1 in Friuli, Molise and
Sardinia after they become low-risk white zones.
They will be followed by Abruzzo, Veneto and Liguria on June 7
if the current contagion curve continues.
In these low-risk zones only social distancing and face masks
are enforced.
The control room's new roadmap also proposes reopening Italy's
bars and restaurants indoors from June 1, gyms on May 24, and
indoors swimming pools on July 1, government sources said.
Shopping malls and markets will reopen on May 22, according to
the proposed road map.
Furthermore, weddings will be able to restart from June 15, with
a 'green pass' certifying a vaccination or test for the
participants.
Theme parks will reopen on June 15.
Sporting events will be able to have 25% crowds in the open from
June 1, also, the control room said.
On July 1, furthermore, social, leisure and cultural centres
will reopen, along with casinos, bingo halls and gambling shops,
while ski lifts will reopen on May 22 but discos will stay
closed both indoors and outdoors.
The control room's recommendations are set to be approved by a
subsequent cabinet meeting.
Draghi said "we want to take gradual measures in order to
understand the effect on contagions".
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA