Complaints about the work of Beeline, MTS and T2 come from the Volga region, Siberia and the Urals.

On the morning of May 5, residents of Moscow, St. Petersburg and several regions of Russia began to complain about the interruptions in the work of the mobile Internet. In Moscow, interruptions affected MTS, T2, Beeline and Yota subscribers, T2 had similar problems in the Moscow region. Complaints also came from the Tyumen, Chelyabinsk and Irkutsk regions, Tatarstan and Mari El.
According to "Shob.rf" at the time of inspection, among the operators and close services at the top of the list were MTS, T2, Rostelecom, Beeline, MegaFon, Telegram and Yota. The service showed dozens and hundreds of complaints for each of them, but such aggregators reflect user appeals, and not official technical diagnostics.
In St. Petersburg, local publications also reported a sharp increase in complaints. Detector404 writes that the peak of the morning appeals fell at 08:15, for an hour the townspeople sent almost 400 applications for problems with communication. Most often mentioned MTS and Yota, users complained about the inability to open sites and messengers.
The direct technical cause of the current interruptions, the operators have not yet publicly disclosed. At the same time, the largest operators warned in advance about possible restrictions on mobile Internet and SMS in Moscow and the Moscow region from May 5 to 9. Earlier we wrote that MTS, MegaFon, Beeline and T2 linked the restrictions on security measures, preparation and holding of mass events. Operators recommended using Wi-Fi, and Beeline specifically advised to include VoLTE for voice calls.
St. Petersburg was also warned in advance about possible problems. According to local media, on the morning of May 5, some users worked only sites and applications from the “white list” in the city, and complaints about the mobile Internet continued to arrive after night reports of drones in the Leningrad region.
While the following is reliably confirmed: the failures are really recorded by users and monitoring services; operators warned in advance about possible restrictions on the period 5-9 of May; there is no official single explanation for the morning surge of complaints in all regions at the time of publication.

On the morning of May 5, residents of Moscow, St. Petersburg and several regions of Russia began to complain about the interruptions in the work of the mobile Internet. In Moscow, interruptions affected MTS, T2, Beeline and Yota subscribers, T2 had similar problems in the Moscow region. Complaints also came from the Tyumen, Chelyabinsk and Irkutsk regions, Tatarstan and Mari El.
According to "Shob.rf" at the time of inspection, among the operators and close services at the top of the list were MTS, T2, Rostelecom, Beeline, MegaFon, Telegram and Yota. The service showed dozens and hundreds of complaints for each of them, but such aggregators reflect user appeals, and not official technical diagnostics.
In St. Petersburg, local publications also reported a sharp increase in complaints. Detector404 writes that the peak of the morning appeals fell at 08:15, for an hour the townspeople sent almost 400 applications for problems with communication. Most often mentioned MTS and Yota, users complained about the inability to open sites and messengers.
The direct technical cause of the current interruptions, the operators have not yet publicly disclosed. At the same time, the largest operators warned in advance about possible restrictions on mobile Internet and SMS in Moscow and the Moscow region from May 5 to 9. Earlier we wrote that MTS, MegaFon, Beeline and T2 linked the restrictions on security measures, preparation and holding of mass events. Operators recommended using Wi-Fi, and Beeline specifically advised to include VoLTE for voice calls.
St. Petersburg was also warned in advance about possible problems. According to local media, on the morning of May 5, some users worked only sites and applications from the “white list” in the city, and complaints about the mobile Internet continued to arrive after night reports of drones in the Leningrad region.
While the following is reliably confirmed: the failures are really recorded by users and monitoring services; operators warned in advance about possible restrictions on the period 5-9 of May; there is no official single explanation for the morning surge of complaints in all regions at the time of publication.