Members of Federation Council speak before an extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210190
Chairman of the Federation Council Committee on Constitutional Legislation and State Building Andrei Klishas speaks during an extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210189
Federation Council's Chief of Staff Gennady Golov attends an extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210188
Deputy Chairman on Social Policy, representative of the legislative body of state power of the Republic of Buryatia Alexander Varfolomeev speaks during an extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210186
Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Budget and Financial Markets Elena Perminova speaks during an extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210185
First Deputy Chairman of the Federation Council Committee on Agriculture and Food Policy and Environmental Management Sergei Lisovsky speaks during an extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210183
Deputy Chairman of the Council on Economic Policy Konstantin Dolgov, right, attends a extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210182
From left to right, Deputy head of Russia's Security Council Andrei Turchak, Federation Council Deputy Chairmen Ilyas Umakhanov and First Deputy Chairman Nikolai Fedorov attend a extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210180
Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Constitutional Legislation and State Building Maxim Kavdzharadze attends an extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210179
Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Budget and Financial Markets Mukharby Ulbashev speaks during a extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210178
Federation Council speaker Valentina Matvienko attends a extraordinary session of the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of the Russian Parliament, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210174
Russian State Duma member Andrei Makarov speaks during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210022
Chairman of the Committee on Security and Anti-Corruption Measures Vasily Piskaryov speaks during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6210011
State Duma First Deputy Chairman Alexander Zhukov speaks during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6209998
Speaker of the State Duma Vyacheslav Volodin speaks during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6209997
Speaker of the State Duma Vyacheslav Volodin speaks during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6209996
Chairman of the State Duma Yaroslav Nilov speaks during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6209991
The chairman of the Russian State Duma's State Building and Legislation Committee Pavel Krasheninnikov speaks during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6209988
Speaker of the State Duma Vyacheslav Volodin listens during the State Duma, Parliament's lower house plenary session, in Moscow, Russia. Russian lawmakers adopted on March 31 a law on expanding powers of the government and its right to introduce a state of emergency in the country and approved penalties for violations of lockdown rules including, in extreme cases, jail terms of up to seven years. Editorial use only, no archive, no commercial use.31.03.2020#6209981