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France Eases Mask Rules; Will End Nightly Virus Curfew

(AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

France on Wednesday eased several COVID-19 restrictions, with authorities saying it’s no longer always mandatory to wear masks outdoors and halting an 8-month nightly coronavirus curfew this weekend.

The surprise announcement by French Prime Minister Jean Castex comes as France is registering about 3,900 new virus infections a day, down from 35,000 in the March-April peak.

Castex welcomed the “very good news” and said the curfew will be lifted on Sunday, 10 days earlier than expected. The decision was made at a government meeting focusing on the virus.

“It’s actually improving more rapidly that we had hoped for,” Castex said. “My dear fellow citizens, I say it, I feel it: we are experiencing an important moment, a happy moment of return to a form of normal life again.”

Wearing a mask will still remain mandatory outdoors in crowded places like street markets and stadiums, he said. People are also required to wear a mask indoors in public spaces, including at work — with an exception for restaurants and bars.

“We have not known such a low level of virus spreading since last August,” Castex said. “Those positive evolutions are due to the mobilization of the French and to the vaccination campaign.”

Still, President Emmanuel Macron called on French people to remain cautious on the sidelines of an event promoting startups in Paris.

“We can only welcome the fact that we have had the right strategy… We see where we are and each time we are adapting things,” Macron said. “But with great caution, nothing is guaranteed… So I’m inviting all our fellow citizens to continue to get the vaccine.”

Over 58% of France’s adult population has received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose. On Tuesday, the European Union nation opened its vaccination programs to those 12 to 18 to protect residents as restrictions are gradually being lifted.

Lots of Parisians enjoyed the shade of the trees Wednesday in the capital’s parks as the temperature reached 33 degrees Celsius (91 degrees Fahrenheit). Many had already removed their masks.

“What a relief!” said Elisabeth Sacco. “It’s too hot, I could not stand keeping (the mask) on any more… It makes me feel joy and a sense of freedom.”

“I was not convinced it was useful anyway, when we’re outside with not many people around,” she added.

Stephanie Durant, a mother of two, said the lifting of the curfew will enable her family to go to the countryside in Normandy, western France, this weekend.

“Before, the curfew was too early to allow us to come back on Sunday evening,” she said.

The French have been living under night-time curfews since mid-October. When the numbers of infections were at their highest level from mid-January to mid-May, the curfew was from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m., with shops closed down and exceptions only for workers and quick walks for pets. It had been gradually pushed back to start at 11 p.m.

Terraces at restaurants and cafes, theaters, cinemas and museums all reopened on May 19. Last week, France reopened indoor spaces in restaurants and cafes as well as gyms and swimming pools — and officially welcomed back tourists from the United States and elsewhere if they are vaccinated with one of the four EU-approved vaccines.

Major sports and cultural events can have a maximum of 5,000 people but all need to show a vaccination certificate or a negative test within the last 48 hours.

France has reported 110,563 confirmed virus deaths, one of the highest tolls in Europe.

(AP)



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