The French have declared that Paris and the largest city in France, Marseille, and its region are areas of “high risk” coronavirus.
According to the Paris City Council, this resolution allows the police prefecture to take more difficult “restrictive measures” to cope with Covid’s new momentum in the capital. “Paris is now classified as an active domain of coronavirus circulation,” he says.
The resolution obtained here an official decree from the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health, amid a strong accumulation of coronavirus cases in both cities.
In the document, Paris and the department of Bouches-du-Rhane, of which Marseille is the capital, rub shoulders with Algeria, Argentina and Bolivia.
“The decree,” he says, “prescribes the general measures to deal with the Covid-19 epidemic in territories emerging from a state of physical emergency and in which it has spread.”
No faster he had been given these powers, Paris announced much more radical measures for the use of masks on the outside. Over the next month, regulations in France on masks have gone from mandatory for indoor public spaces to mandatory in many spaces in several cities, adding Paris.
Now, since Saturday 15, the mask zones have enlarged and enlarged on a giant component of Paris.
Officials in Paris and the Bouches-du-Rhane region now have the power, Reuters reports, “to limit the movement of other people and vehicles, limit public and air transport, limit public buildings and close restaurants, bars and other establishments. . “
Regulations for mandatory masks have also been submitted through the Marseille government since 8 August.
For more than a fortnight, Covid in France has been on an upward trajectory. As of Friday, 2,846 new instances were registered. More than 2500 in a day. Current infection rates are at a record point after the lockout, observed since May. However, even on par with some Days of April and March.
There’s a little déj vu in all this. Spiral infections should be ignored and have led to discussions about long-term blockages.
“The positive verification rate for Ile-de-France (Greater Paris) is now 2.4% versus the national average of 1.6%,” the city corridor said. “The incidence is the highest among people aged 20 to 30.”
It is also superior in central Paris and in some giant suburbs such as Seine-Saint-Denis, Val de Marne and Hauts-de-Seine. In Paris, there are 70 cases of Covid consisting of 100,000 inhabitants, for the national average of 34. That’s the trend over the last two weeks.
Not much more in the port city of southern Marseille; this figure is 57. The Bouches-du-Rhane region also includes cities such as Aix-en-Provence and Arles.
Government action is paving the way for more difficult borders across France, at Covid hotspots. Giving the local government the right to impose restrictions as it pleases.
“The prestige of the new ‘red zone’ of major French cities can cause other nations to impose restrictions,” Fox News speculated.
This would continue a trend in development in Europe. Britain just brought about 40 14 days for all the other French who arrived from today, due to the accumulation of infections.
Last week, Norway put France on its “red” list, the same era of self-isolation for anyone who returns or arrives from there. Belgium, 10 days ago, banned in Greater Paris.
A growing number of low-risk Covid countries are pointing to Paris and the French regions as a “red zone” to travel. Well, France has also declared Paris.
You can stay with me on Instagram and log in to my website as well
I have 3 decades of experience as a journalist, foreign correspondent and writer-photographer. Working for print, virtual and radio media on 4 continents,
I have 3 decades of experience as a journalist, foreign correspondent and travel writer-photographer. Working for print, virtual and radio media on 4 continents, I am also an experienced hotel journalist and writer of travel guides and cultural histories in Australia, France, Italy, Spain, Switzerland and Borneo. Deep on the road between my Parisian and Australian bases, I write for Forbes with a globetrotting attitude and a topicality in travel, culture, hospitality, art and architecture. My hobby is to capture the unique people, situations and occasions I encounter along the way, whether in words and images. I have a bachelor’s degree in professional writing from the University of Canberra, a master’s degree in European journalism from Robert Schuman University in Strasbourg and a member of the Society of Travel Writers of the United States. Love for my wild local island of Tasmania fuels my commitment to sustainable travel and conservation.