Saskatoon StarPhoenix

France’s famed cafés shut their doors

‘IT’S SAD TO SEE’

- GEERT DE CLERCQ AND MATTHIAS BLAMONT

PARIS • The Café de Flore, once the drinking hole of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-paul Sartre, and the Brasserie Lipp continued serving customers during the Second World War. But on Sunday they locked their doors until further notice, as France upped its fight against the coronaviru­s.

“At least during World War Two we knew what we were up against. Now we have no idea,” said the Brasserie Lipp’s head waiter, who used to listen to tales of German occupation recounted by colleagues at the 140-yearold Left Bank eatery.

Across the strangely quiet boutique-lined Boulevard Saint-germain, Sophie Chardonnet watched an employee at the Café de Flore swing off his motorbike to collect his belongings before beginning a two-week period of temporary unemployme­nt.

Similar scenes of shuttered cafés, quiet streets and empty stores played out across the French capital after Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced restrictio­ns on French public life unpreceden­ted in living memory.

Restaurant­s, cafés, bars and cinemas would be closed indefinite­ly from Sunday, Philippe said. So too would libraries, shopping malls, and sports halls — any venue deemed non-essential. Food stores and gas stations would remain open.

“It’s sad to see these cafés closed. Let’s hope it won’t be for too long,” Chardonnet said. “I won’t complain, however, it is for our own good.”

The coronaviru­s has sickened some 4,500 people and killed 91 in France, which followed neighbouri­ng Italy and Spain and other European nations in enforcing the severe measures.

In Paris’ central Marais area, home to the Jewish quarter, brands from U.s.-based Michael Kors to France’s Sessun had mounted signs telling customers to shop online.

Catherine Perochon, whose falafel restaurant Chez Marianne serves 1,000 dishes on a typical Sunday, was clearing up with staff, getting rid of perishable­s and switching off the gas, anticipati­ng she would be shut for at least a month.

“It was so last minute,” she said of the prime minister’s notice.

Others took a more defiant stand, at least while they could.

In the upscale 16th arrondisse­ment, some food and flower stall owners at a market in the Passy neighbourh­ood made a spirited last stand.

“It’s just hard to throw all the merchandis­e away,” said florist Laurent Binder, 41. “Some people are angry at us but others are coming in and making last-minute purchases.”

Nearby, police pressed another stall owner to close within the hour.

Queues formed outside butchers and bakers, with scant heed paid to the government’s plea to people to stand one meter apart to minimize the risk of contagion.

But in the most visited city in the world, tourists were in small numbers.

The coronaviru­s outbreak has forced the closure of the Louvre museum, Eiffel Tower and Moulin Rouge cabaret bar.

On the Champs-élysées, usually thronged with tourists, there were fewer pedestrian­s than usual, though a steady stream of visitors took selfies in front of the Arc de Triomphe at the top of the boulevard.

On the Trocadero esplanade facing the Eiffel Tower, unlicensed souvenir vendors tried to flog their wares to the small number of foreigners present. “What can you do? These are special times,” said 26-year-old U.S. tourist Laura. “I came from Belgium a week ago and was planning to go to Italy next. Goodbye to that.”

 ?? PHILIPPE LOPEZ / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Chairs are piled up Sunday inside the Café de Flore in Paris as cafés and restaurant­s shut down amid the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.
On Saturday, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced the closure of all non-essential public places in France.
PHILIPPE LOPEZ / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Chairs are piled up Sunday inside the Café de Flore in Paris as cafés and restaurant­s shut down amid the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. On Saturday, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced the closure of all non-essential public places in France.

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