France 'set to report nearly 300,000 Covid cases' as unvaccinated face January 15 hospitality ban


(MENAFN- Trend News Agency)

France could announce close to 300,000 new COVID-19 infections on Tuesday, the country's health Minister has said Olivier Veran has said, Trend reports citing Evening Standard .

Only last week Mr Veran predicted cases could reach 250,000 a day by the start of January.

It comes after France became the sixth country in the world to report more than 10 million Covid-19 infections since the outbreak of the pandemic on New Year's Day.

Daily deaths linked to Covid-19 have risen far less steeply than cases, in another sign that the currently dominant Omicron variant is on the whole causing less serious illness than Delta.

Meanwhile French government officials on Tuesday vowed to enact by mid-January a law to block unvaccinated people from hospitality venues, despite the legislation hitting a procedural hitch in parliament overnight.

“January 15 remains our goal,” for the law coming into force, European Affairs Minister Clement Beaune told LCI television.

Until now France has enforced a Covid-19 health pass, which means in order to get into restaurants, cafes or cinemas or board trains, people need to either show a fresh negative test, or proof of vaccination.

The legislation will remove the option of showing a negative test, effectively barring unvaccinated people from hospitality venues or trains.

It has faced fierce resistance from anti-vaccination campaigners and far-right and far-left groups, but is backed by the government which has a majority in parliament.

Tense discussions in parliament on the new law were halted after midnight on Monday after a majority of deputies voted to suspend the session. Pro-government lawmakers were caught by surprise, and were not present in the chamber in sufficient numbers to block the motion.

The heads of the various parliamentary groups must now set a new date for debates to resume, said Annie Genevard, the Vice-President of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament.

Once voted in the lower house, the new law needs to be voted on by the Senate, before it comes into force on January 15.

“The minister of relations with parliament and parliament members will discuss the timetable today. We could have the National Assembly and parliament sitting over the weekend to accelerate. We need to move fast,” Mr Beaune said.

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Trend News Agency

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