France observes nationwide 6pm curfew to slow coronavirus spread

A man walks past a snowman in Paris shortly before a nationwide curfew starts, from 6pm to 6am, on Jan 16, 2021. PHOTO: REUTERS

PARIS (REUTERS) - Cities, towns and villages across France were practically empty on Saturday (Jan 16) as residents stayed home and businesses shut to observe a nationwide curfew intended to help stem the spread of coronavirus, especially a more infectious variant.

The virus has killed 70,000 people in France, the seventh highest toll in the world, and the government is particularly worried by the more transmissible variant first detected in Britain, which now accounts for about 1 per cent of new cases.

The curfew was brought forward two hours to 6pm and will run until 6am.

In addition, from Monday, anyone travelling to France from outside the European Union will have to show a negative test result and self-isolate for a week upon arrival.

"These measures were necessary given the situation. While worsening, it remains relatively better than many countries around us, but I took them because the context, notably with the evolution of the virus, means we have to have utmost vigilance," Prime Minister Jean Castex said in a speech.

Shops and businesses sought to mitigate the potential losses of the curfew by opening as early as 7.30am on Saturday.

While snow showers hit large parts of the country, people adjusted to the new hours to make sure streets were empty by early evening.

"The weekend is less problematic, but during the week people leave the office around 6pm and it's a popular time to get optic wear," Mickael Levy, 45, founder of Win Optic, told Reuters TV.

"It's another restriction so let's hope it does something because once again it's more economic loss for us."

New daily infections has hit a plateau at around 20,000, but the number of people being admitted to hospital and requiring intensive care treatment is still rising.

The government has also been criticised for the slow pace of France's vaccine rollout.

Renaud Piarroux, an epidemiologist at the Pitie-Salpetriere hospital in Paris, said the curfew would have little impact in curtailing the new variants, which he believed would predominate within six weeks.

"We will have to make big efforts like the English and even the Germans. I think it's best to toughen things up now rather than later," he told BFM TV.

"We have to anticipate. I think a new lockdown is inevitable."

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