Paris mayor calls for schools to be closed to rein in Covid-19

Ahead of possible new restrictive measures to be announced by the government

Schoolchildren clean their hands at the private primary school Jeanne D'Arc in Saint-Maur-des-Fosses, near Paris, amid the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) outbreak in France, March 30, 2021. PHOTO: REUTERS

PARIS:

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said on Wednesday that schools should be closed to rein in the spread of the COVID-19 virus, speaking ahead of possible new restrictive measures to be announced later in the day by the government.

“I think the schools should be closed”, Hidalgo told BFM TV.

France imposed a month-long lockdown on Paris and parts of the north after a faltering vaccine rollout and spread of highly contagious coronavirus variants forced President Emmanuel Macron to shift course.

Read: Paris goes into lockdown as Covid-19 variant rampages

Since late January, when he defied the calls of scientists and some in his government to lock the country down, Macron has said he would do whatever it took to keep the euro zone’s second largest economy as open as possible.

However, he ran out of options just as France and other European countries briefly suspended use of the AstraZenca vaccine.

His prime minister, Jean Castex, said France was in the grip of a third wave, with the virulent variant first detected in Britain now accounting for some 75% of cases. Intensive care wards are under severe strain, notably in Paris where the incidence rate surpasses 400 infections in every 100,000 inhabitants.

“The epidemic is getting worse. Our responsibility now is to not let it escape our control,” Castex told a news conference.

Now was the time to tighten restrictions, Castex said.

“Four weeks, the time required for the measures to generate a sufficient impact. (It is) the time we need to reach a threshold in the vaccination of the most vulnerable.”

The lockdowns kicked in earlier this month in France’ 16 hardest-hit departments that, with the exception of one on the Mediterranean, form a corridor from the northern Channel port city of Calais to the capital.

Also read: After gambling France could dodge new Covid lockdown, Macron forced to back down

Barbers, clothing stores and furniture shops will have to close, though bookstores and others selling essential goods can stay open.

Schools will stay open and people will be allowed to exercise outdoors within a 10 km (6.2 miles) radius of their homes. Travel out of the worst-hit areas will not permitted without a compelling reason.

“Go outdoors, but not to party with friends,” the prime minister said.

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