Albuquerque Journal

Court orders France to rethink 30-person limit on worship

Several bishops said they wouldn’t enforce rule

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PARIS — France’s highest administra­tive court on Sunday ordered a rethink of a 30-person attendance limit for religious services put into place by the government to slow the spread of coronaviru­s.

The measure took effect over the weekend as France relaxed some virus restrictio­ns, but it faced opposition by places of worship and the faithful for being arbitrary and unreasonab­le. Even before the ruling, several bishops had said they would not enforce the restrictio­ns and some churches were expected to defy it.

The Council of State has ordered that Prime Minister Jean Castex modify the measure within three days.

French churches, mosques and synagogues started opening their doors again to worshipper­s over the weekend — but only a few of them, as France cautiously starts reopening after its latest virus lockdown.

Many expressed irritation outside several Paris churches where priests held services for groups that numbered over 30.

“People respected social distancing perfectly, each to his place and with enough space, so I don’t think there’s anything to worry about here,” Laurent Frémont told The Associated Press on his way home after Mass.

To attend Mass, they had to book tickets online and give their names on their way in. However, the church’s protocol didn’t seem to help limit the number of people inside the building.

Asked whether they would stay if the crowd was too large, most said they would.

“I really think you couldn’t do better, from a sanitary point of view,” said Humbline Frémont.

For some, the new rules stirred up fears. French Catholics were sharing rules and recommenda­tions on social media for how to behave if the police arrive at a church for a head count.

Farid Kachour, secretary general of the group running the mosque of Montfermei­l, a heavily immigrant suburb northeast of Paris, says that his mosque simply wouldn’t open with too few people permitted.

“We can’t choose people” allowed to enter for prayer. “We don’t want to create discontent among the faithful,” he said.

Kachour noted that Muslims pray five times a day, further complicati­ng the situation. To respect the rules, the mosque would need 40 services a day to allow all the faithful to pray, he said.

Places of worship were allowed to continue during France’s latest nationwide lockdown, which is scheduled to end in December, but regular prayer services were banned due to health concerns. Around the world, some religious services have been linked to coronaviru­s clusters, including supersprea­ding events.

France has reported over 52,000 virusrelat­ed deaths, the third-highest pandemic death toll in Europe, after Britain and Italy.

“Nonessenti­al” shops reopened in France on Saturday, and museums and cinemas will reopen on Dec. 15, but bars and restaurant­s will stay closed for indoor dining until Jan. 20.

 ?? MICHEL EULER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Churchgoer­s line up outside the Notre-Dame-des-Champs church Sunday in Paris. French churches, mosques and synagogues were under a 30-person limit.
MICHEL EULER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Churchgoer­s line up outside the Notre-Dame-des-Champs church Sunday in Paris. French churches, mosques and synagogues were under a 30-person limit.

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