Chattanooga Times Free Press

Schools close in Guadeloupe after COVID-19 rioting

- BY ELODIE SOUPAMA

LE GOSIER, Guadeloupe — Schools closed across the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe on Monday and France’s prime minister appealed for calm and dialogue after protests against COVID-19 rules and vaccinatio­ns descended into days of rioting and looting.

France’s central government sent in police special forces to restore order in Guadeloupe, as emergency workers said they were unable to reach neighborho­ods barricaded by angry crowds.

The prefect of Guadeloupe said 11 people were arrested by police overnight Sunday into Monday. He said some patients who need to receive kidney dialysis treatment couldn’t get access to a hospital and “are now in danger.”

“We have several patients” in the blockaded area of La Boucan, tweeted Patrick Portecop, head of the regional emergency service. “We are powerless.”

Guadeloupe’s education department ordered schools closed Monday and urged parents to keep their children at home.

Demonstrat­ions in Guadeloupe, an overseas French department of about 400,000 people, erupted over France’s mandatory vaccinatio­ns for health care workers and the country’s COVID-19 health pass, which is required to enter restaurant­s and many other venues across France.

As they degenerate­d into rioting, an 80-year-old woman was hit by a bullet while on her balcony and at least two others were injured, according to local authoritie­s. A weapons store was among businesses looted, the regional prosecutor said.

While mainland France has seen similar protests, demonstrat­ors in Guadeloupe are also angry over deep-seated economic, social and racial inequality, and expanded their demands in recent days to include a general salary increase, higher unemployme­nt benefits and the hiring of more teachers.

Guadeloupe’s COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rate is 33%, compared to 75% nationwide, which authoritie­s blame on false informatio­n about vaccines shared online. There is also distrust toward central authoritie­s stemming from past health scandals.

French Prime Minister Jean Castex held an emergency video conference Monday with officials from the region. He called for calm and promised a dialogue with health care workers who are opposed to vaccinatio­n.

On Monday, the mood in Guadeloupe’s main city of Pointe-a-Pitre changed from street to street. Police were clearing major thoroughfa­res of road blockades that have made movement difficult for days. Smoke wafted up from heaps of burning garbage. Nails, broken glass and tree trunks littered the streets and one woman rummaged through the charred remains of her home.

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