The Philippine Star

France’s Macron announces curfews to fight COVID surge

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PARIS (Reuters) – France will impose a nightly curfew on almost one third of the country’s 67 million people to tackle a resurgent coronaviru­s, but a new national lockdown is not envisaged, French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday.

Macron announced the curfews, which will take effect from Saturday and run each night from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. the following morning, shortly after the government declared a new public health state of emergency. The restrictio­ns will last for at least four weeks.

The president said curfews would be imposed in the greater Paris region, Marseille, Toulouse, Montpellie­r and five other cities.

”We’re in a second wave,” Macron said in an interview on national television. “We have to react.”

France, like other European countries, is grappling with how to slow the virus’ spread and ease pressure on a once-again strained healthcare system while keeping its $2.71 trillion economy open and protecting jobs.

On Wednesday it reported 22,591 new coronaviru­s cases, the third time in six days the daily tally has gone beyond the 20,000 threshold. The virus has claimed more than 32,000 lives in France.

Macron said France had not lost control of the virus, but added: “We are in a worrying situation.”

People under curfew would have to forget about nighttime visits to restaurant­s or to friends’ houses, though essential trips during curfew would still be allowed, Macron said.

Anyone violating the curfews would be fined $221.

There would be no restrictio­ns on public transport, and people would still be able to travel between regions without restrictio­ns. Family gatherings, however, should be restricted to no more than six people.

Macron said the goal was to reduce the current rate of 20,000 new cases per day to around 3,000 and to sharply reduce the burden on intensive care units in hospitals.

”We will get through this,” the president said.

The French government previously declared a public health state of emergency in March this year, when hospitaliz­ations caused by the pandemic were near their peak.

 ?? AFP ?? Medical staff members transport a patient at the intensive care unit of the Lariboisie­re Hospital in Paris on Wednesday.
AFP Medical staff members transport a patient at the intensive care unit of the Lariboisie­re Hospital in Paris on Wednesday.

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