Tag Archives: Law

Coronavirus diary day 59 – You pays your money, you gets your vaccine

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It ain’t over yet! Keep washing your hands! (And social distancing, which they’re not doing in this old ad for laundry soap)

First it was our masks, now it’s our medicines! The US will be served first if Sanofi develops a vaccine against Covid-19 because the Americans have put more money into the research, the French-based drug company’s boss said yesterday.

Last month US diplomats in China bought shipments of masks ordered by France, Germany and other countries as they stood on the airport runway.

Now Paul Hudson, a peripatetic British marketing expert who was appointed last year, has said Washington will be able to place the biggest advance orders of any vaccine that is developed because the Barda research and development body has “shared in the risk” in trying to develop it.

If Europeans want to move higher up the pecking order, the EU must match American investment, he said.

The French opposition Socialist Party shot out a communiqué dubbing the announcement scandalous.

Pointing out that France has contributed a fair bit to Sanofi’s worldwide success, the party says that our health should not be subject to the whims of the market, adding “no French company should gamble with our own health security without facing the threat of nationalisation”.

“It’s obvious that our health must be excluded from the rules of the market,” Socialist former minister and presidential candidate, Ségolène Royal, told France Inter radio.

All of which begs the question of why they left pharmaceutical companies in private hands while they were in power.

Junior government minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher joined in the condemnation, although she kept it in the conditional.

“For us it would be inacceptable if any country had privileged access on a pretext that would be a monetary pretext,” she told Sud-radio.

In the evening Sanofi said that the US would have priority for vaccine produced on its territory and the rest of its production would go to “Europe, France and the rest of the world”. They didn’t say where they plan to produce how much of the product, which, for the moment, remains strictly hypothetical anyway.

There will be a second wave in France unless strict control of people’s behaviour is maintained, a study led by the Institut Pasteur warns.

The boffins who estimated that 5.7% of France’s population had been infected, thus making herd immunity an idle fantasy for months to come, now believe that was an overestimate. They have revised the figure to 4.4%, ie 2.8 million people.

In Ile de France, the hardest-hit region, 9.9% of the population has been infected, they believe.

Lockdown has been effective, the study concludes, but that means that very few people have assembled the necessary antibodies.

They find that 3.6% of infected people are hospitalised and 0.7% die, ranging from 0.0001% of under-20s to 10.1% of over-80s.  

“Effective measures of control designed to limit the risk of transmission must be maintained after 11 May [when lockdown ended] to avoid a resurgence of the epidemic,” they warn.

Meanwhile, people are rushing to the shops to buy clothes and get haircuts.

They can also go to the beach in some areas, although they mustn’t sunbathe or picnic, just take exercise.

So what has the government got against parks?

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo wants them to be reopened to the public for the sake of their health.

“You can take the métro but you can’t go into a park,” she points out.

But the capital is in a red zone, so letting the populace gambol in those green spaces would be “inopportune, given the vivacity of the virus’s circulation in Ile de France,” government spokesperson Sibeth Ndiaye says.

As a compromise, Hidalgo suggests limiting the number of people who can enter at any one time.

Cédric Herrou, the farmer who helped migrants cross the border from Italy, has been acquitted by an appeal court in Lyon.

NGOs say the decision means that solidarity is not a crime.

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 27,074, 83 in the past 24 hours, which is a return to the lower figures reported at the end of last week. 21,071 people are in hospital, down 524, and 2,428 are in intensive care, down 114. 58,673 patients have been discharged from hospital, 888 of them yesterday.

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Coronavirus diary day 57 – France’s lockdown ends smoothly – apart from some Parisians behaving badly

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The banks of the River Marne yesterday Photo: Tony Cross

Officials say that the end of lockdown went smoothly. But some Parisians threw caution to the winds. And a young man appeared in court in western France after being caught flouting confinement rules 17 times.

France is a country of rules and regulations. But it’s also a country where the rules are habitually bent.

It’s the “normalement” factor.

“Do you have a room?” you may ask a hotel. “Normalement, non,” they may reply and then find you one, which shouldn’t really be let for some obscure reason or other but can be put at your disposition exceptionellement. (I remember this example from a book review I read many years ago. I think it was of Polly Platt’s brilliantly titled French or Foe, which I confess I have never got round to actually reading.)

There was a lot of rule-bending as the end of lockdown approached, as I noted yesterday.

Now it’s over but we’re still a red, high-risk, zone here and normalement the promenades along the side of the Marne are closed by decree. But, encouraged perhaps by the fact that it’s not exactly clear how they’re defined, many of us celebrated the first day of déconfinement with a riverside stroll.

There were even a couple of fishermen. Unlike the flock of Canada geese with their goslings, who are not constrained by anti-virus concerns, people were mostly observing social distancing.

Canada geese on the Marne yesterday Photo: Tony Cross

That wasn’t the case along the Canal Saint Martin in Paris. Crowds of young, immunity-confident people gathered there in great, tightly packed numbers.

That prompted the Paris préfecture to issue a new decree, banning the consumption of alcohol along the waterway.

Meanwhile, shoppers have been queueing at the required distance, masks are widely worn and many people continue to work from home.

An 18-year-old man appeared in court in Rennes, the Breton capital, yesterday, charged with his 17th breach of lockdown rules.

Police stopped his car on Saturday night. His passengers legged it but he was detained and found to be driving without a licence or insurance.

They also found that he had already been booked 16 times for being outdoors without the certificate required if you left home.

A sentence of 35 hours of community service after his 10th breach of the rules had apparently failed to make a great impression.

I can find no report of Monday’s judgement.

France’s Covid-19 death toll now officially stands at 26,643, 263 in the past 24 hours. That’s a worrying reversal of the decline in the daily death rate, which was down to 70 yesterday, but not as high as last Monday’s 306. It can probably be partly explained by underreporting at the weekend and, of course, reflects the infection rate of about a fortnight ago. 22,284 people are in hospital, down 285 yesterday, with 2,712 in intensive care, down 64. 56,724 patients have been discharged from hospital, 507 of them yesterday.

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