Sat 18 December 2021:
French authorities have urged people to get vaccinated against COVID-19 before the holiday festivities as infections surge and the government tries to avoid another lockdown.
“The fifth wave is here and it is here in full force,” Prime Minister Jean Castex told a news conference on Friday, likening the spread of the highly mutated Omicron variant in Europe to “lightning”.
Castex further said the fast-spreading and highly transmissible variant is expected to dominate infections in France at the start of January.
To curb the spread of the virus during the holidays, the government banned public concerts and fireworks displays at New Year’s celebrations. It also called on people to avoid large gatherings and limit the number of family members congregating at Christmas.
France has also sharply restricted travel to the country from outside the European Union, including from the United Kingdom, where Omicron has been behind record numbers of coronavirus cases.
Authorities announced limits on reasons for travelling to France from Britain, a negative virus test less than 24 hours old and a mandatory 48-hour isolation upon arrival beginning on Saturday.
Al Jazeera’s Natacha Butler, reporting from Paris, said the French government has been monitoring the situation in the UK “with a lot of concern”.
French authorities have also accelerated vaccinations, including a massive push to administer as many booster shoots as possible before families gather for Christmas. Health officials narrowed the gap between the second and third shot to four months from the previous five, Castex said.
The National Velodrome in Paris, the home of France’s track cycling team and now once again the country’s largest vaccination centre, was buzzing with people getting jabs before heading home – or doing last-minute shopping – for the holidays.
“It’s to be safe,” said Nilo Schwencke, a doctoral student.
Before coming on Friday to get a booster, Coralie Vieville said she had shared a file with 40 family members, expected to gather for Christmas, to determine who has already been vaccinated and who has not.
“That’s how we are preparing,” Vieville said. Because it’s a large family, she said, “it’s quite important to do this and be sure there’s as little risk as possible.”
Tackling non-vaccination
More than 48 million of France’s 67 million people are fully vaccinated and tens of thousands are signing up for first shots or boosters.
“People often forget and say ’I’m vaccinated, I’ve caught COVID, the vaccination’s not working,” said Marc Morales, a doctor at the Velodrome, as recreational cyclists sped around the track. “That’s false. It protects against severe cases, it reduces transmission but in terms of transmission it’s not 100 percent efficient.”
Castex said the government would announce new measures to tackle non-vaccination from next year.
To increase pressure on people to get vaccinated, the government will present a bill early next year to change the French health pass into a vaccination pass. That means people will have to be vaccinated in order to enter restaurants or use long-distance public transport.
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES
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