France pushes ahead with COVID pass despite protests
Thousands have protested against government plans to extend the use of the pass to cafés, restaurants and inter-city travel.
People in France will need to show a health pass from Monday to enjoy usually routine activitLearn more about manual excerptsies such as sipping a coffee in a café or intercity travel, despite large scale protests against the plan.
President Emmanuel Macron has championed the so-called COVID-19 pass, which is now being extended to cafés, restaurants and air and train travel, as a way to curb a fourth wave of the coronavirus and encourage people to get vaccinated.
But the plan has led to four weekends of angry protests with almost a quarter of a million people taking to the streets across the country on Saturday.
The health pass is generated in a QR code either by a full course of vaccinations, a recent negative virus test or a recovery from COVID-19. The government expects a one-week grace period for consumers and businesses to get used to the new rules.
âThe pass and the vaccination drive should help us avoid new curfews and lockdowns,â Health Minister Olivier Veran told Le Parisien daily.
The pass was first introduced on July 21 for visits to cultural venues such as museums and theatres, as well as sports games.
Veran announced slight modifications in the rules â" notably that tests could be 72 hours old and not 48 and also that self-tests carried out under medical supervision would be allowed.
But he emphasised there would be no going back on rules which will remain in place until at least November, lamenting the attention paid to those who are âanti-vax, anti-science and anti-stateâ over those who respected distancing and had been vaccinated.
âI am willing to hear the fears, do everything to reassure. But there comes a time when enough is enough,â he said.
Opponents argue the new rules encroach on civil liberties in a country where individual freedom is prized.
About 237,000 people protested across France on Saturday, including 17,000 in Paris, the interior ministry said, exceeding the 204,000 recorded the previous weekend â" numbers that are extremely unusual for protests at the height of the countryâs summer break.
Protesters claim the COVID-19 pass infringes on their civil liberties [Stephane de Sakutin/AFP]Recent polls, however, have shown that a clear majority of French back the pass, including the extension to cafés and restaurants. Franceâs Constitutional Council approved the plan on Thursday.
It will be needed in the indoor and outdoor areas of restaurants but will not be required on metro systems and suburban transport.
The numbers in hospital are still well below previous highs seen in the pandemic but there were 1,510 people in intensive care with COVID-19 on Saturday compared with 1,099 just one week ago.
Macron hopes the plan will further accelerate the vaccination drive in France where more than 55 percent are now double-jabbed. Aides have noted that almost seven million new bookings were made for first jabs since the plans were outlined.
Cases have been rising fastest in Corsica and the Mediterranean coast, which are seeing a summer influx of holidaymakers.
But the biggest concern is over Franceâs overseas territories in the Indian Ocean and Caribbean, where new lockdowns have been ordered amid a slow vaccine uptake.
Macron, who faces re-election next year, has in recent days repeatedly taken to the social media platform TikTok, popular among young people, to get his message across.
âGet vaccinated. Get vaccinated. Get vaccinated,â Macron said in the latest video on Friday.
âItâs a question of being a good citizen ⦠our freedom is worth nothing if we infect our friends, neighbours or grandparents. To be free is to be responsible.â
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