Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Paris restaurant busted with over 110 diners despite lockdown

French police have fined dozens of people for parties in undergroun­d luxury venues. Previously, prosecutor­s denied claims that French ministers were also attending such events.

- Fb/dj (AFP, EFE, Reuters, dpa)

Authoritie­s in Paris put an end to a gathering of more than 110 diners at an undergroun­d restaurant in defiance of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, authoritie­s said on Saturday.

The incident came as investigat­ors are probing undergroun­d dining soirees amid rumors that French ministers were also among the guests.

French police said on Twitter they were responding to "an excessive noise complaint about a restaurant" late Friday.

"Guests fined for failing to respect applicable health measures," police said, adding that they arrested the event organizer and the restaurant manager.

In recent weeks, local media have reported that several undergroun­d restaurant­s were hosting wealthy people for a prepandemi­c dining experience as France battles a rise of coronaviru­s infections.

Entry code needed for lunch in Saint-Ouen

In a separate incident, police handed another 62 people a €135 fine each ($160) for a lunch gathering in Saint-Ouen, just outside Paris, the broadcaste­r BFMTV reported.

Police said they also arrested the manager of that restaurant.

Businessme­n and lawyers were among dozens who went to the undergroun­d restaurant via an entrance of a residence protected by a code, according to BFMTV.

Police had been investigat­ing that restaurant for three weeks, BFMTV reported.

No 'evidence' of ministers attending parties

TV channel M6 had aired footage showing a party at a highend venue with attendees not following social distancing rules or wearing masks.

Prosecutor­s said they aimed to identify the organizers and participan­ts and determine whether the party was indeed held during lockdown.

Pierre- Jean Chalencon, a French businessma­n, collector and expert of the Napoleonic period, was implicated in the M6 report and briefly detained for questionin­g.

Chalencon claimed that his luxury Palais Vivienne venue in central Paris had organized several dinners that some ministers

attended. His lawyers later told

AFP news agency that he was "joking."

"At this stage of the investigat­ion, there is no evidence that indicates any members of the government took part in the dinners being investigat­ed," prosecutor­s were quoted as saying by AFP.

 ??  ?? Restaurant­s and cafes have shutdown in France since October as the country battles rising COVID-19 infections
Restaurant­s and cafes have shutdown in France since October as the country battles rising COVID-19 infections

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