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Pressure grows in France to tighten mask rules amid rise in coronavirus COVID-19 cases
Masks are currently required outdoors in hundreds of French towns, but rules vary widely.
Highlights
- With cases in Paris rising particularly fast, police can now shut down cafes or any gathering of more than 10 people where distancing and other hygiene measures aren't respected.
- France recorded more than 2,800 new cases on Friday, up from a few hundred daily cases a month ago.
Paris: Pressure is growing on the French government to require masks in all workplaces and everywhere in public as coronavirus infections resurge.
Paris police stepped up mask patrols Saturday as the French capital expanded the zones where face coverings are now required in public, including neighborhoods around the Louvre Museum and Champs-Elysees shopping district.
With cases in Paris rising particularly fast, police can now shut down cafes or any gathering of more than 10 people where distancing and other hygiene measures aren't respected.
Masks are currently required outdoors in hundreds of French towns, but rules vary widely.
France's High Council for Public Health published new guidances Friday recommending ?the systematic use of masks in all enclosed collective places, public and private? ? including workplaces. About half of France's current virus clusters started in workplaces.
In an appeal published in the daily Liberation, a collective of medical workers urged a nationwide return to working at home, which France largely abandoned after two months of strict lockdown.
France recorded more than 2,800 new cases on Friday, up from a few hundred daily cases a month ago.
While the rise is in part attributed to increased testing, the rate of positive tests is also growing and is now at 2.4 per cent. However, the number of virus patients in French hospitals and intensive care units has not risen so far.
The rising infections prompted Britain to impose quarantine on vacationers returning from France starting Saturday.