France warned of a new national blockade amid the largest buildup of coronavirus cases since March

The shocking news came when President Emmanuel Macron warned that the most affected country could face a national blockade.

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On Friday, the French government reported 7,379 new instances of Covid-19, the number since its closure.

The statistic of being worried just below the record height of 7578 set on March 31 at the most sensitive point of its original wave.

Metropolitan France is now experiencing an “exponential accumulation in the transmission of the virus,” the ministry of fitness warned.

The total number of cases showed more than 267,077, while the cumulative number of deaths was greater than 20 to 30,596.

Friday’s daily figure of 7,379 well above several hundred consistent with the day recorded in May and June, thanks in component to intensified testing.

But the instance rate is also increasing, with more than 30 tests consistent with 100,000 inhabitants in 20% of the country’s regions.

That number at number one just a month ago.

In theory, nothing can come to light,” Macron told reporters when asked about a new national blockade.

“I’ve learned a lot from what we went through for 8 months if I said I completely excluded it,” he said.

“Containment is the crudest measure to fight a virus,” he said, while urged others to be “collectively very rigorous.”

Macron said his government supported regional measures to prevent epidemics and would do everything imaginable to save it from a new national blockade by learning to live with the virus.

Marseille, the largest city of the time in the country, a red zone seven days ago – and imposed the mandatory use of face masks.

France’s strict two-month blockade in the spring devastated its economy, but is credited with the severe slowdown in the virus.

The number of deaths shown in France through The Covid-19 is the third in Europe after Britain and Italy.

Amid considerations that France could be a new focus of viruses, Macron defended his government’s pressure to restart the economy and its control of the post-employer closure period.

During the summer, the French traveled the country to participate in family gatherings and dance parties accused of fueling the rise of cases.

Faced with new cases, Paris has started demanding masks from Friday and French staff across the country will have to wear masks to paint from Tuesday.

The government also promised this week to develop additional capacity after being criticized for the shortage of masks and evidence when the virus first criticized France.

But it’s still in progress with plans to send Frances back to 12.9 million fellows on Tuesday.

The country’s most beloved professional cycling race, the Tour de France, also continues despite the escalation of infections.

Macron said Friday that staff will gradually resume their jobs. “We want everyone back to work,” he said.

With Britain, Germany and Belgium imposing all new restrictions on others coming from all or part of France, Macron called for greater European coordination to combat the spread of the virus.

He said the closure of Europe’s borders was meaningless, especially for the millions of people in the EU travel exclusion zone crossing borders to go to work.

In contrast, Hungary, a member of the EU, announced on Friday that from Tuesday it would give its borders to foreigners.

Speaking through a mask, Macron admitted that the masks are embarrassing, boring, but called it a moderate constraint with which we settled for some time to revive the economy.

It also promised billions of public investments in projects aimed at returning jobs and production to France, and inaugurated a new production at the Seqens pharmaceutical plant north of Paris.

France’s reliance on its suppliers in China has fueled its shortage of masks, medicines and other medical supplies.

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