French police search homes of top officials in virus response inquiry
French police searched the homes of the health minister, the former prime minister and other top officials yesterday in an investigation into the government's response to the global coronavirus pandemic.
The dawn searches, confirmed by the Health Ministry, come as France is fighting against a resurgent epidemic that has now filled a third of the country' s intensive care units with COVID-19 patients and is again putting Europe to the test. President Emmanuel Macron announced curfews on around 20 million people in the Paris region and eight other French metropolitan areas starting tonight to try to slow the tide.
The investigation threatens to rekindle public frustration with a government that's been accused of lying to them about mask stocks, underestimating testing needs and overestimating France's ability to vanquish the pandemic not once, but now twice.
About 1,000 protesting nurses, doctors and other public hospital staff marched through Paris yesterday to demand more investment, staff and higher salaries after years of cost cuts.
“We are tired!'' read multiple banners.
The searches “will make the people's mistrust grow,'' said Dr Ludovic Toro, who was among the doctors, COVID-19 patients, prison personnel, police officers and others who filed more than 90 legal complaints in the spring over the government's management of the pandemic.
A special French court for prosecuting government ministers ordered an investigation as a result of their complaints.
Among those whose homes were searched include Health Minister Olivier Veran, his predecessor Agnes Buzyn, former Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, the current head of the country' s national health service Jerome Salomon, and Si beth Ndiaye, a former government spokeswoman. Veran' so ff ice was searched as well.
Dr Toro still has no high-protection masks for his practice, nine months after the first virus case was confirmed in France. And he says he is seeing more patients with C OVID -19 symptoms now than he did in the spring. Asked about Thursday' s searches, current Prime Minister Jean Cast ex wouldn' t comment on the inv es ti gation but said he had total confidence in the health minister to do his job.
The government con tinues to send mixed messages about the virus. In addition to the curfew in several cities, the prime minister announced a nationwide ban on public weddings, even as the president encouraged French people to travel as usual for upcoming autumn school vacations.
The government announced it will deploy 12,000 police to enforce the new curfew, and will spend another 1 billion euros to help businesses hit hardest by the latest virus restrictions. “Our compatriots thought this health crisis was behind us,'' Castex said.
”But we can't live normally again as long as the virus is here.''
France is registering nearly 180 virus cases per 100,000 people every week, with 22,591 total new cases Wednesday. It has reported one of the world's highest virus-related death tolls, at more than 33,000 lives lost.