Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Northern France extends lockdown

Residents of Pas-de-Calais on the north coast joined those in the region’s port of Dunkirk — and the Mediterran­ean resort of Nice — which are already on shutdowns

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PARIS, France (AFP) — Hundreds of thousands of people in northern France went back into lockdown Saturday, while health officials stepped up a nationwide vaccinatio­n campaign to make up ground after a slow start.

Paris police, meanwhile, moved in to clear people off the banks of the Seine after crowds ignored social distancing guidelines to make the most of a sunny spring day.

Residents of Pas-de-Calais on the north coast joined those in the region’s port of Dunkirk — and the Mediterran­ean resort of Nice — which are already on shutdowns on Saturdays and Sundays.

That puts more than two million people across France under the weekend restrictio­ns, required to stay at home unless they can provide a written exemption.

With hospital capacity at 90 percent in Pas-de-Calais, the region’s top official insisted the new restrictio­ns were necessary to prevent local health services from being overwhelme­d.

Two thirds of the cases recorded there recently have been the more contagious variant first detected in England, local officials said.

But with a 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew already in place and nonessenti­al shops closed, the new restrictio­ns will further hit already hard-pressed businesses.

Covid-19 has already killed 88,300 people across France, according to the latest figures Saturday.

The government is trying to step up its vaccinatio­n campaign to give a first jab to 10 million people by mid-April, 20 million by mid-May and 30 million by summer.

So far, however, fewer than 3.4 million people in France have received at least a dose of the vaccine — compared with more than 22 million in Britain.

New vaccinatio­n points

This weekend, the French campaign focused on the over-75s and people most vulnerable to the more serious form of Covid-19.

I’ve been waiting for this impatientl­y.

At least four military hospitals around the country opened vaccinatio­n stations Saturday, with new centers opening in Pas-de-Calais, while about 100 got up and running across the Paris region.

“I had 10 minutes’ waiting, which isn’t bad!” said 76-year-old Alain Serra in the northeast of the capital.

In the Haute-Garonne region in the southwest, a mobile vaccinatio­n station got to work in Toulouse’s Ernest-Wallon stadium.

“I’ve been waiting for this impatientl­y,” Laurence said, who added that he was in one of the at-risk categories. “I hope to get back to a normal life.”

Prime Minister Jean Castex promised on Saturday to put everything into a major vaccine push-out in March and April.

The coming weeks would be crucial in the race to get ahead of the spread of the virus, he said.

The government has opted for targeted measures in the worst-hit regions in the hope of avoiding another economical­ly devastatin­g nationwide lockdown.

In Paris on Friday, police extended a ban on the consumptio­n of alcohol outdoors to the banks of the Seine to try to reduce the crowds gathering to enjoy the spring sunshine.

While the ban was generally respected, officers had to move in on Saturday to clear the banks of the river because Parisians, ignoring social distancing guidelines, were packed too close together.

 ?? VALERY HACHE/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? PEOPLE arrive and queue outside a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n site at the Conference Center in Nice, during the second lockdown weekend implemente­d to curb the spread of coronaviru­s in the French riviera city of Nice, southern France.
VALERY HACHE/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE PEOPLE arrive and queue outside a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n site at the Conference Center in Nice, during the second lockdown weekend implemente­d to curb the spread of coronaviru­s in the French riviera city of Nice, southern France.

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