Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Parties test French lockdown

Police report they broke up event with 300-plus participan­ts

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PARIS — France is in a second lockdown amid a second wave of the coronaviru­s, but some people can’t stop partying.

Police intervened to end a middleof-the-night house party attended by at least 300 people “in total disdain for health rules,” the Paris Police Prefecture tweeted. Partygoers threw bottles at police, police said. Daily newspaper Le Parisien said police had to toss special grenades as intermedia­te weapons to break up the gathering and escape.

The Police Prefecture tweeted later Saturday that at least one person at the party was infected with the coronaviru­s. Authoritie­s appealed to everyone who participat­ed in the gathering to get tested quickly and to quarantine.

The party in Joinville-le-Pont, in the Val de Marne region west of Paris, drew French media attention because of its size and the chaos that reportedly reigned at the house. Le Parisien said the property was equipped with a pool, a sauna and a dance floor, and was regularly rented out.

A fight on the dance floor was in progress when police arrived, the newspaper reported. The party had been advertised on social media.

“It was a giant cluster last night,” Joinville-le-Point Mayor Olivier Dosne said.

Another “clandestin­e fete,” a smaller, private affair days earlier in southeast France, got attention because it was held by nearly two dozen medical interns at their residence at Bigorre Hospital in Tarbes. Police broke up the Wednesday party at about 4 a.m. The partygoers await eventual punishment.

Such incidents come as police are out in force around France checking to ensure that pedestrian­s and motorists aren’t breaking the rules of a national lockdown that is expected to remain in place at least until Dec. 1.

The lockdown rules require authorizat­ion to go outside, with a maximum one hour allowed and exceptions made for reasons like work.

Schools remain open, in contrast to a spring lockdown. Widely seen as a lighter version of France’s spring lockdown, it has been taken less seriously by some.

As of Friday night, nearly 43,900 people have died in France since the coronaviru­s began spreading through the country. French hospitals are stretched and delaying some operations to tend to COVID-19 patients.

France is not the only country contending with lockdown rebels.

Two foreign exchange students in Greece who hosted an after-hours party at their apartment in the northern city of Thessaloni­ki were arrested at 10.30 p.m. Friday and fined 3,000 euros ($3,550) each on the spot. The 24-year-old Palestinia­n man and 21-year-old woman from France received suspended prison sentences of two years and two months on Saturday.

Their 15 party guests, all university students from western Europe, were fined 300 euros ($355) each but not arrested.

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