Coronavirus diary day 32 – Good news, bad news and municipal largesse

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Lockdown in France enters its second month today. It seems to be bearing modest fruits, with admissions to hospital falling for the second day running and the number of people in intensive care falling for the eighth.

The official death toll continues to rise, however, as does the number of recorded cases, which is, of course, an underestimate.

Nevertheless, it’s not looking good for herd immunity, if a report from Wuhan is to be believed.

A hospital there found that only 2.4% of its employees and 2-3% of discharged patients have developed antibodies, according to the Wall Street Journal, leaving its director, Wang Xinghuan, to conclude that a vaccine is our only hope.

Everybody’s slagging off China these days, which will no doubt send the ranting diplomat in the Paris embassy into a frenzy of what-aboutery.

Trump has of course been lashing out for some time and, inevitably, the British have echoed the American leader. Now Macron has told the Financial Times that it is “naïve” to suggest China had dealt better with the crisis.

Things have “happened that we don’t know about”, he added darkly.

Today the Chinese admitted that reporting of the number of deaths in Wuhan has been delayed and inaccurate and added 1,290 to the death toll there.

But that only takes the total to 4,632 out of a population 1,439,323,776, which is difficult to believe. We know that the People’s Republic’s bureaucratic authoritarian culture led local officials to harass doctors who blew the whistle at the beginning. So there is probably underreporting.

But, when they did act, the Chinese acted decisively and the country seems to have turned the corner now.

In the US 32,916 people have now died, out of a population of 330,584,100; in Italy 22,170 out of 60,480,630; in Spain 19,315 out of 46,751,140; in the UK 13,759 out of 67,813,940; and in France 17,920 out of 65,244,420.

There is a considerable disparity, even if the Chinese figures are hugely underestimated.

More on municipal communism. Raphaël, the Champigny-sur-Marne council employee who phones to check on Mum’s well-being every weekday delivered two bags full of fruit and veg to our door yesterday.

The council is distributing healthy food to people in financial difficulty and to those who should not be going out too much during lockdown.

We are both of an age to be at relatively high risk from the virus, so we presumably fall into the second category.

We can’t claim to be in financial difficulty, as our neighbour Marianne pointed out. I gave her some bananas, apples and potatoes. That shut her up.

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 17,920. 31,305 people are in hospital, down 474 in 24 hours, and  6,248 are in intensive care, down 209. 32,812 people have been discharged from hospital.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 31 – Amazon France’s closure shows why you need unions

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Amazon has closed its warehouses in France for at least five days after a court ordered it to limit its trade to strict essentials because of Coronavirus safety fears. The case was brought by a militant union that said the company was failing to protect its workers from the virus.

The company appealed against the court’s ruling but then took even more drastic action – total closure. At first it announced closure for five days to review anti-virus measures, which it earlier insisted were adequate. But on Thursday French CEO Frédéric Duval told RTL radio he did not know when the sites would reopen.

The announcements have been accompanied by petulant complaints about the “major consequences” of “the union action that led to this result” on customers and employees, while delicately refraining to mention its effect on the company’s profits.

Amazon’s employees – there are almost 10,000 in France – will remain on full pay during the closure.

The case was taken to court by the Sud trade union, which accused the company of “carrying on as normal” despite the virus.

By contrast, in the US Amazon has fired at least three employees who have spoken out on employee safety during the epidemic.

Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa were dismissed on the grounds that they had previously broken the company’s internal regulations with public criticism of its stance on climate change.

“We support every employee’s right to criticize their employer’s working conditions, but that does not come with blanket immunity against any and all internal policies,” an Amazon spokesperson told Fox News via email in a magnificent example of doublespeak.

Earlier, Christian Smalls was shown the door for violating “several terms of his employment”.

The French case also shows the value of France’s labour law, a regular target of free-market fanatics.

The French government has announced supplementary payments worth a total of a billion euros for the country’s four million poorest households.

Healthworkers in the worst-hit départements are to receive a bonus of 1,500 euros and the rest will be paid an extra 500 euros.

Public-sector employees who are still working are to receive a bonus of up to 1,000 euros.

It’s a shame the government didn’t listen to healthworkers when they were protesting and taking strike action over low pay and difficult working conditions last year.

Hospital admissions have gone down for the first time since the start of the epidemic. The number of people in intensive care has been falling for several days. The death toll continues to rise, however.

France’s Covid-19 death toll is now officially 17,167, up 1,438 in 24 hours. 31,779 people are in hospital, down 513, and 6,457 are in intensive care, down 273. 30,995 people have been discharged from hospital, 2,190 yesterday.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 30 – Macron’s plan to help Africa and a delicate matter concerning China

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

I’m honour-bound to mention the French president’s interview with my former employer, RFI. Africa being RFI’s beat, Emmanuel Macron told Christophe Boisbouvier that a moratorium should be declared on African countries’ debts to help them face up to Coronavirus.

The sum total of those debts has risen from 35% of GDP in 2012 to 90% today, he pointed out. It now stands at 365 billion dollars.

“Every year a third of what Africa exports in trade goes to service its debt,” Macron said. “That’s mad!”

The French president wants a “massive” cancellation of the debt. In the short term, he hopes that the G20 will decide on Wednesday evening that the interest should no longer be paid. He has to convince the Chinese, who hold 40% of Africa’s debt, as well as Russia, the Gulf states and private lenders.

The controversial Professor Didier Raoult also came up. He claims that the low level of Coronavirus infection in Africa at present is due to the high level of consumption of anti-malarial drugs, like hyrdoxochloroquine, which he is using along with azithromycine at his Marseille laboratory to combat Covid-19.

Raoult was apparently born in Senegal. “In Africa we all guzzled chloroquine when we were kids,” he has said.

Macron, who visited the professor for three hours last week, was cautious, given lack of conclusive proof that the treatment Raoult is advocating works and the doubts of many of his colleagues.

Raoult is a “great scientist” but his treatment has to be properly tested, Macron said. “It’s not a question of belief, it’s a question of science.”

As well as having interviewed pretty much anybody who is anybody in Africa, Boisbou is becoming a dab hand at interviewing French presidents. He interviewed Macron’s predecessor, François Hollande. A charming, “well brought-up” gentleman, he told me.

China’s ambassador to France, Lu Shaye, was “summoned” by Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian yesterday for a telling-off about a bizarre rant on the Chinese embassy’s website. The interview actually took place by phone, what with lockdown and all.

Needled by criticisms of the People’s Republic handling of the virus, the post lays into “media who consider themselves to be paragons of impartiality and objectivity, and experts and politicians of certain Western countries more concerned with slandering, stigmatising and attacking China than with thinking about how to contain the epidemic in their own countries and in the rest of the world”.

Pointing to various blunders in the handling of the virus in Europe and the US, the anonymous diplomat declares “I haven’t seen many reports or in-depth investigations in the big Western media revealing these facts.”

As it happens, the source for all these assertions seems to be the Western media.

One allegation is definitely not from that source, though. Unhappy about a letter signed by 80 French MPs calling for Taiwan to be allowed to join the WHO, the author accuses the Taiwanese authorities of racially insulting WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

With a flourish the author quotes a “cyber-writer” comparing “certain Western political and cultural elites” with the cuttlefish, which “when it is in danger, squirts its ink to blacken the water and takes advantage to flee”. A fair criticism – but not just of the West.

The French thought long and hard before reprimanding Lu, according to Le Monde. They don’t want a diplomatic spat to stop delivery of the millions of masks the country has ordered. And there’s also the African debt question to negotiate.

In 1968 a flu epidemic cost a million lives, the Swiss paper Le Temps points out. “Spanish flu” killed 20-40 million in 1918-20. Another two million died of “Asian flu” in 1957.

The world shrugged off these deaths, it says, comparing that reaction to today’s response to the Coronavirus.

“Back then people over 65 were considered to have escaped natural mortality,” medical historian Bernardino Fantini tells the paper. “While today even the deaths of the elderly are considered a scandal.”

By that reckoning, both my 95-year-old mother and I are dead people on leave, which is not very comforting.

We will continue to do our best to avoid catching the virus, nevertheless.

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 15,729, up 762 in 24 hours. 32,292 people are in hospital, a rise of 179, and 6,730 are in intensive care, down 91. 28,805 people have been discharged from hospital.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 29 – Macron does humble but misleads over virus testing

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Emmanuel Macron put on his humble hat in his third television address to the nation last night. For a man whose default mode is technocratic arrogance that must have been difficult.

In a sober speech described by one editorialist as “cuddle-therapy”, the president said that lockdown should be relaxed, though not completely wound up, on 11 May.

He paid tribute to key workers, many of whom are the sort of people he has previously dismissed as not having “succeeded” in life, called for humility all round, admitted “we” were not sufficiently prepared for the crisis, and pointed out that the virus is increasing inequality.

“We must be able to depart from the beaten path, from ideologies, reinvent ourselves,” he said, adding. “And me first of all.”

That would be very welcome. But it is pretty vague. Macron, like all other world leaders, has been obliged to renounce his worship of the free market during the crisis. Will he return to capitalist form once it shows signs of easing off?

Will society become more egalitarian?

Will those workers who have proved they are indispensable be paid what they’re worth or will they just have to be satisfied with applause at 8.00pm?

Macron raised the “possibility of planning carbon sobriety”. This crisis is an opportunity to avert even greater devastation by kicking the carbon habit. But will governments resist the temptation to go for growth by any means possible once workers are back at their posts?

The phased ending of the lockdown, which Interior Minister Christophe Castaner has already said is a target not a certainty, seems above all aimed at getting more people back to work, an understandable but risky strategy.

And there was one case of economy with the truth in the president’s address. Macron said that testing the whole population “would make no sense”.

Given that many infected people show no symptoms, that’s patently untrue. Widespread testing has been a key measure in those countries that have been most successful in containing the virus.

This is a repetition of the government’s disinformation about wearing masks. If there aren’t enough, just tell us. Don’t make out it wouldn’t be a good thing to test far more people than is currently planned.

France’s Covid-19 death toll now stands at 15,167, up 574 in the last 24 hours. 32,113 people are in hospital, 287 admitted yesterday. 6,281 patients are in intensive care, down 24. 27,718 have been discharged from hospital, 532 of them yesterday.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 28 – Far-right Catholics dodge lockdown, bosses want workers to pay

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Fundamentalist Catholics dodged France’s Coronavirus lockdown to hold a secret mass over Easter. The clandestine service took place at Paris’s Saint Nicolas du Chardonnet church, which has been occupied since 1977 by a renegade order that insists on holding services in Latin.

Police were called on Saturday evening by local people who heard sounds coming from the church.

They fined the priest but say all the other participants had left by the time they arrived. About 40 people are said to have been there. Video posted online shows priests and choirboys but nobody in the pews.

Social distancing does not seem to have been observed and the host was administered by hand into the mouths of the faithful.

Saint Nicolas du Chardonnet’s rejection of any form of modernisation, even if ordered by God’s representative on Earth, makes it popular with the Catholic far right. To read about its post-1977 history is to dig into a deep seam of reaction.

Long-time National Front leader Jean-Marie Le Pen reportedly often goes there to hear masses for dead friends. His estranged daughter Marine, who nicked his party off him, had her three children baptised there.

Maxime Brunaire, the young nutter who tried to assassinate then president Jacques Chirac during the 2003 Bastille Day parade, worshipped there and the editors of far-right rags like Minute and l’Oeuvre française have put in an appearance from time to time.

The funerals of Paul Touvier, the only Frenchman ever convicted of crimes against humanity, for his participation in the Holocaust under Vichy France, and National Front bigwig Jean-Marie Stirbois were held there.

Other churches in France have observed the lockdown, although a priest and his 13-strong flock were caught holding a mass on a campsite last month.

Other people worship mammon, notably the French bosses’ union, the Medef. Its leader, the magnificently named Geoffroy Roux de Bézieux, has declared that the plebs will have to give up some of their rights to pay for the cost of the lockdown.

De Bézieux thinks that the length of the working week, public holidays and paid holiday should be reexamined once it’s all more or less over. As it happens, this is not the first time the Medef has raised these questions.

It doesn’t seem that de Bézieux has suggested to his members that they pay out lower dividends and invest in more productive technology in response to the crisis.

The junior minister for the economy, Agnès Pannier-Runacher, has also said we will probably have to work “a bit harder” to make up the loss of production.

Even the leader of the mainstream right Républicains, Xavier Bertrand, is shocked by these suggestions.

“The people who rule us have to put themselves in the French people’s place for a quarter of a second,” he told BFMTV. “If their answer once the crisis is over is more austerity, they haven’t understood a thing.”

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 14,393, a rise of 561 in 24 hours. 31,826 people are in hospital, up 506, but the number of people in intensive care has gone down for the fourth day running, by 38. 27,186 people have been discharged from hospital.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 27 – Zebra on the loose

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

In surrealist Coronavirus news, a zebra was spotted cantering along a road in Champigny last night. It was accompanied by two horses.

They had escaped from a circus that has pitched its tents by a huge commercial centre just outside the town, it turned out.

“It was heading for the fort at cracking pace,” reported Murielle Roux, who posted a video of the equine dash for freedom and on Facebook. “I called the police and they said that they had caught it. Ouf!”

So my town has an exotic version of those pictures of ducks waddling though Paris and coyotes by the Golden Gate bridge, which have led us all to speculate that a fall in pollution has allowed nature to reclaim the cities.

Not so, some spoilsport scientist has told Le Monde. They were there already but now we can see them, thanks to the lack of traffic.

Gearges and Liliane Marchais welcome Fidel Castro chez eux

Liliane Marchais, the widow of long-time Communist Party chief Georges Marchais, died on Wednesday in a care home in Bry-sur-Marne. She was 84.

The couple lived in Champigny and Fidel Castro visited the town to have dinner with them in 1995.

Fabienne Sintes, a much-travelled reporter who presents a broadcast on France Inter radio, told me once that she nearly ran Marchais over once, while learning to drive in Champigny. That would have been quite a headline, even if she had only just started her glorious career at the time.

A local doctor, Ali Djemoui, who practiced in Bois l’Abbé, has died, aged 59.

Good news on the mask front. The département is to buy 1.5 million and start distributing 150,000 per week on 27 April.

Some towns have also bought their own supplies.

As for the lockdown, Macron’s advisers have told the media he is going to extend it to at least 15 May, if not to the end of the month.

His speech to the nation tomorrow evening is going to be “Churchillian”, they say. In the “blood, sweat and tears” sense, one assumes, not the imperialist raving.

The Covid-19 death toll in France now stands officially at 13,832, up 635 in 24 hours. 31,320 people are in hospital, up 53, and 6,883 are in intensive care, down 121. 26,391 people have been discharged from hospital, cured.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 26 – Sorrows of a sybarite

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
A Portuguese-run stall on Champigny market last year

I miss the markets. On a normal Saturday I would either be taking the bus down the road to Joinville-le-Pont or trailing my wheely-basket over the bridge to Champignol, by the RER station. Both areas are a bit posher than Champigny, so higher quality produce, especially at Joinville.

On Sundays I can go to Champigny market, two minutes away on what is possibly the last Place Lénine left in France, or walk along the river bank to a glorious covered market in Varenne.

Champigny market is also open on Tuesdays and Fridays and Champignol on Wednesday.

Except they’re not due to lockdown.

I don’t actually go to a market every day in normal times but I’m a frequent visitor, even on days when I don’t buy very much. I love the bustle. The traders, most of them at least, being friendly, whether by nature or commercial calculation. The banter with the clients. The feast for the eyes of fruit, veg, fish, charcuterie …

In multiracial Champigny there’s a multicultural mix both in customers – Portuguese, Turks, Maghrebins, sub-Saharan Africans, me – and goods on offer – chorizo, pastel de nata, börek, pain de semoule, groundnuts, plantains and stuff I don’t recognise, without forgetting a splendid selection of offal.

Now we queue, two metres apart, across the Place Lénine where the market-traders should be declaiming and the shoppers shuffling, to be admitted to Monoprix one at a time.

Inside we douse our hands with cleanser and rush around the aisles as quickly as we can, silently cursing our fellow shoppers for coming too close.

Maybe I’m not very discriminating when it comes to vegetables, but I don’t find their offer too bad in that department, apart from the mysterious absence of mushrooms (I know, not technically a vegetable).

But the fruit is bland. And the meat! I bought a chicken and you could break its bones just by looking at them. It may have been organic but it hadn’t done much walking. That tells in the texture, spongy, and the taste – let’s just say you need to make full use of the spice cupboard.

And where do they hide the eggs? I know they exist because the man in front of me at the checkout had some. But I searched and searched and couldn’t find them.

We’re not starving, so I suppose this is a bit of a whinge. But I miss meat and fruit with flavour, a choice of radish, olives not in jars, and, above all, good cheese. It’s there on the shelves – Comté, Brie, brebis, chèvre … but I’m not sure I could tell the difference on a blind tasting. On the markets I have a choice of jovial cheesemongers ready to serve a generous selection of those 258 varieties de Gaulle famously remarked on.

Worrying news from South Korea, where they’ve done a famously good job of fighting the virus thanks to methodical testing.

Some 51 patients who tested positive, shortly after testing negative and declared cured. The same thing is reported to have happened in China and Japan.

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 13,197, about a third of them in care homes. The number of people in intensive care has gone down for the second day running, by 62 to 7,004, but the number of hospital admissions continues to rise, by 500 to 31,267. There are 90,676 recorded cases, an underestimate as everyone admits.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 25 – Indispensable, low-paid, disrespected and exposed to Covid-19

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
The Cour St Jean, Champigny-sur-Marne

Philippe had the virus. He was exposed to it because he does an indispensable job, even if that job is poorly paid and commands little respect.

Philippe is a dustman, leaving home during the night and returning in the early afternoon, all for a fraction of the salary that many less essential workers pocket. While the white-collar workers who live in our courtyard work from home, while the man in an apparently inessential branch of the building trade appears to be laid off, Philippe kept going to work. And so he caught the virus.

He’s a friendly man with a southern French accent – he came to the Paris area from the south-west. He lives in a ground-floor flat more or less opposite our house.

Philippe often opens the window – bare-chested and brown between the months of April and September – to chat with the neighbours. He hadn’t done that for a few days, so when he appeared at the window yesterday afternoon I asked if he had been ill.

He had, for about 10 days, he said. The experience had not been pleasant, he Added, but he’s recovering now.

This is not the first time his job has exposed him to illness. He once caught mange off a mattress, apparently.

Inequality is evident not just in exposure to the virus but also in our experience of confinement.

Philippe is stuck in his poky, dark flat. My mum and I are able to sit out in front of our house and three lucky neighbours actually have gardens. And then there are the inhabitants of the 16e arrondissement of Paris who headed to their holiday homes before lockdown was announced.

The town council asked Raphaël, the man who phones every day to check on Mum’s health, to go out and see how well the lockdown was being observed in the area he lives in, Bois l’Abbé.

Despite its pretty name, Bois l’Abbé is a working-class area with a lot of social housing, much of it tower blocks.

A lot of people had fled their less-than-luxury apartments to enjoy the sunshine, Raphaël reported. “People can’t take it any more,” he said.

I lived in a 10th-floor council flat in Coventry in the 1980s and I can testify that it can drive you a bit nuts even when you’re not locked in to avoid an epidemic. Not everyone seems to feel the same way, but I found the lack of street-level social interaction – the sort of interchange you don’t even notice – isolating and depressing.

That’s what the inhabitants of Bois l’Abbé are trying to escape, even if they are perhaps unwise to do so at the moment.

“Those who live in tower blocks and small flats will find the lockdown a lot tougher,” as Emily Maitlis said on the BBC yesterday. “Those who work in manual jobs will be unable to work from home.”

And, as Raphaël says, the government has to take that into account when deciding the conditions for extending lockdown and how to wind it down when the time comes.

The government is putting more police on the roads out of town this weekend to stop city-dwellers who haven’t got the message trolling off on an Easter break.

There is hope we will soon reach a plateau, France’s top health official, Jérôme Salomon, says. “But it’s a very high plateau”.

More than 12,000 deaths from the virus have now been recorded. The deaths in care homes that were not accounted for yesterday have been added to today’s total.

But for the first time more people were discharged from intensive care than were admitted, slightly easing the pressure on the overstretched health service.

There were 41% more deaths in the week 30 March-5 April than usual, although not all those deaths were due to the virus.

France’s official Covid-19 death toll now stands at 12,210. 30,767 people have been hospitalised, up 392 in 24 hours, but the number in intensive care is down 82 to 7,066. There are 86,334 officially recorded cases but that is clearly an underestimate due to the lack of testing. 23,206 people have been discharged from hospital, up 1,952.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 24 – Why do we buy masks from the other side of the world?

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

France’s lockdown is to be extended, to nobody’s surprise.

The president is to tell us how long we must remain in our homes on Monday when he will make his third televised address since the start of the crisis.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo has sent a letter outlining proposals on how to handle a phased end of lockdown to Prime Minister Edouard Philippe.

At more than 20,000 inhabitants per km², Paris is the most densely populated city outside Asia. Many residents live in small flats and Madame la Maire is especially worried about people who can’t effectively self-isolate from the people they live with if they become infected.

She calls for widespread targeted testing and certificate of immunity for people who have recovered, so that they can be exempted from some lockdown requirements. I hope people are thinking this through, since I believe it is not yet clear how long immunity can last.

Hidalgo, who would clearly like to be France’s first female president, joins a number of politicians who have called for an inquiry into the government’s handling of the epidemic and is critical of the lack of protective material.

The scandalous mask shortage surely has lessons for all. Not only because of the cost-cutting mentality that meant that stocks built up after previous epidemics were run down but also because of the global division of labour that means Europe and the US are fighting on the tarmac to buy masks and other supplies from China when they could have been produced here.

Globalisation has not only devastated the environment and helped spread the virus, it has also made the world economy dependent on supply lines that are fatally disrupted by this kind of crisis. And it seems there will be more such crises.

Plasma may save lives. Since Tuesday French medics have been running a clinical trial to see if transfusions of blood from cured patients can save severely ill patients.

Blood has been taken from 200 people who have recovered and is being given to 30 of the group of 60 patients, Le Monde reports. The other 30 are being given a placebo, which of course is standard practice.

The first results won’t be available for two to three weeks, unfortunately.

Similar tests are taking place in the US, where the doctor in charge says that each donation of blood could save three or four lives.

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 10,869 but this is an underestimate because a “technical problem” has prevented the number of deaths in care homes being updated today. There are 82,048 confirmed cases (also an underestimate because of the lack of testing) 30,375 people hospitalised, up 348 in 24 hours, and 7,148 in intensive care, an increase of only 17. 21,254 people have been discharged from hospital.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Coronavirus diary day 23 – French cities fight virus as death toll rises

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Over 10,000 people have now died due to the Covid-19 epidemic in France. But the rate of admissions to hospital and to intensive care is down.

The death toll is grim but the admissions figures are the ones to watch to track the evolution of the epidemic. There were 305 hospital admissions yesterday, compared to over 1,000 every day last week and 1,882 a week ago, when 452 were admitted to intensive care, compared to 59 yesterday.  

Officials also say that some of the statistics may have been underreported at the weekend, pushing them up a bit at the beginning of this week.

Going out for physical exercise, permitted for about half an hour by the government’s decree, has now been banned between the hours of 10.00am and 7.00pm in Val-de-Marne, the département where we live, as it has been in Paris and some other parts of the banlieue.

Being ultra-cautious because of Mum’s advanced age, I was not taking advantage of the exercise clause. But I wonder if the restriction is wise.

Won’t it mean more people jogging at the same time and thus less social distancing? I suppose they calculate that it will reduce the net amount.

People living in tiny Paris flats must become desperate from time to time. I wonder what the longer-term effects on mental health will be, not to mention alcoholism and domestic violence.

Several local councils have either made covering your face compulsory or are thinking of doing so. There’s still a mask shortage, so you have to use a scarf or download one of those helpful online videos and raid your old T-shirt stock.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo says that two million masks will be distributed to the city’s residents soon. If some other city doesn’t nick the supply, that is. Bouches-du-Rhône, the département around Marseille, only received 300,000 of an order for three million because the others were requisitioned for the Grand Est, where the virus has hit really hard.

Bourgogne-Franche Comté, which includes Burgundy and the Jura, also lost its order. Admittedly there are few cases there.

Paris’s masks will be made by small “socially responsible” companies in France, she says, which begs the question why the government hasn’t done more on the local-production front.

The city also plans to place hand-cleanser distributors in public places by the time lockdown finishes, an idea I believe is inspired by some Asian countries.

The French economy is now officially in recession. GDP fell 6% in the first quarter of 2020, the worst drop since the end of World War II. A quarter of the workforce – 5.8 million people – is laid off.

Having failed to ban a rally by the Tablighi-Jamaat Islamic sect, the Pakistani authorities are now struggling to track down the 100,000 people who attended.

The number of infections in the country is rising – it’s now officially 4,000 and the death toll is 55. Officials say that 60% of cases are either people returning from Iran, where Covid-19 has hit hard, or people who attended the gathering in Lahore.

They are now scattered around the country, spreading the virus. Officials have found 20,000 and 539 have tested positive in Punjab, which is the only province to issue figures. The organisers didn’t bother to keep records of who attended.

Tablighi Jamaat has also been blamed for spreading the virus by refusing to cancel huge assemblies in India and Malaysia.

Religious gatherings have helped spread the virus in several countries, including France. It’s all very well believing God will protect you but then you put other people’s lives in danger. In Italy a football match helped the epidemic spread.

The Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 10,328, with 597 dying in the last 24 hours. There are 30,027 people in hospital, 7,131 in intensive care. The total number of recorded cases is 78,167, up 3,777 in 24 hours but that is certainly a huge underestimate.

Facebooktwitterlinkedinrssyoutube
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail