New Straits Times

ANTI-TERROR WALL AT EIFFEL TOWER

Bulletproo­f glass walls part of RM163m measures to protect site

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PARIS is set to unveil thick, bulletproo­f glass walls and metal fences around the Eiffel Tower, designed to protect France’s most famous monument from terrorist attacks.

The boosted security measures, under constructi­on since last year, come with France still on high alert after a string of jihadist attacks that have killed more than 240 people since 2015.

The new walls, shown to journalist­s during a site tour on Thursday, are part of security measures that have cost nearly €35 million (RM163 million) and are due to be finished by the middle of next month.

Glass walls measuring 6.5cmthick will run along the riverside Quai Branly boulevard and as the Avenue Gustave Eiffel, which separates the tower from a park.

The walls, which are bulletproo­f as well as resistant to vehicle-ramming attacks, are “rock-solid for absolute security”, said Bernard Gaudillere, head of the SETE, the company which runs the Eiffel Tower.

The other two sides will be fenced off with metal barriers formed from curved prongs in the form of the tower itself and at 3.24m-high, stand exactly a hundredth of the height of the “Iron Lady”.

Gaudillere said his team worked with police to decide how best to secure a monument which had itself repeatedly switched off its twinkling night-time lights in memory of the victims of attacks around the world.

Tourists visiting the site on Thursday said they felt reassured by the new measures, still mindful of the horrific Islamic State attacks of November 2015 in which 130 people were killed at Paris nightspots.

“We live in a dangerous time. I think it’s a great idea. I feel more safe,” said Edyta Poncyljusz, visiting from Warsaw.

David Luke, from the United States state of Utah, noted with dismay that tourists were no longer free to walk under the tower as was the case last time he visited four years ago.

“But I think it’s a good idea,” he said of the security walls.

“It’s inconvenie­nt and a little annoying, but we’re used to security measures in the US — going through metal detectors just for a basketball game.”

Like other French tourist sites, the tower is regularly patrolled by anti-terror troops, and the forecourt underneath the iron structure has been fenced off over terrorism fears since June 2016.

Gaudillere acknowledg­ed that the temporary fences were “not very aesthetica­lly pleasing”, giving the monument the look of a building site, but promised the end-result would be “infinitely nicer and more romantic”.

He said the building work did not appear to have dented visitor numbers, which were still expected to reach up to seven million this year.

Tourists would be able to access the gardens and the forecourt underneath the tower for free once passing through the security fences, he said.

The walls are part of a €300 million revamp of the Eiffel Tower, with most of the work due to be completed ahead of the 2024 Olympic Games here.

 ?? AGENCY PIX ?? Visitors walking to one of the new entrance gates set around the Eiffel Tower in Paris on Thursday.
AGENCY PIX Visitors walking to one of the new entrance gates set around the Eiffel Tower in Paris on Thursday.
 ??  ?? Part of a bulletproo­f glass wall being erected around the Eiffel Tower.
Part of a bulletproo­f glass wall being erected around the Eiffel Tower.

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