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BORDEAUX

Bordeaux: What are the new Covid-19 restrictions on daily life?

Local authorities in Bordeaux and the surrounding Gironde département have revealed a series of new measures to stem the spiralling Covid-19 rates in the south western city.

Bordeaux: What are the new Covid-19 restrictions on daily life?
Photo: AFP

The new measures were announced by Fabienne Buccio, head of the Nouvelle Aquitaine region, during a press conference on Monday.

French Prime Minister Jean Castex on Friday asked Buccio, along with her colleagues in the region Bouches-du-Rhône around Marseille and in the overseas territory Guadeloupe, to present new and stricter measures to limit the rapidly rising spread of the virus in their areas.

The Gironde département, and especially in Bordeaux, Covid-19 has spread rapidly over the last few weeks.

Here's a look at the new rules.

Bordeaux

Gatherings in certain parts of Bordeaux such as parks and gardens are now limited to 10 people and authorities banned people from drinking alcohol in the streets.

 

Buccio asked everyone in the city to keep with the 10 people rule, even when organising private events such as family gatherings, birthdays and weddings.

“Dance nights are prohibited in bars, party halls and at all weddings and birthdays,” Buccio said, adding that consuming alcohol while standing up and at bars was also prohibited in the city.

The prefect also warned bar owners that any establishment caught breaching the health rules would be closed down “from one day to the next.”

The city has cancelled the annual heritage days events (Journées du Patrimoine) in September.

All student parties at the start of the term will also be scrapped.

Gironde

In the wider Gironde département around Bordeaux, the cap on the maximum number of people at events has been cut to 1,000 compared to the 5,000 limit nationwide.

 

Also in the whole of Gironde “Events such as fun fairs, flea markets, or neighbourhood parties will not be authorised,” the prefect said.

She added that all protests would be “banned if they don't respect a strict health rule protocol.”

Additional gendarme and riot police units will be deployed to enforce the measures, she added, and a fresh review of the situation will be carried out in the next two or three weeks.

“If we have to toughen the measures, I will, but if we can lighten them, I'll do that as well,” Buccio said.

'Work from home'

Buccio also said the city of Bordeaux would increase public transport services during rush hours to alleviate pressure and ensure more space for commuters.

She reminded listeners that those who could should work from home and warned businesses that authorities would increase checks to see that they complied with the government's health rules.

For all the measures, see the series of tweets below.

 

Mounting pressure on hospitals

Bordeaux, which was largely spared in the first wave of infections this spring, has seen hospital rates spiral over the past few weeks.

The number of patients hospitalised in the south western Nouvelle Aquitaine region has doubled in 10 days.

READ ALSO: Why are Bordeaux and Marseille facing tougher Covid-19 restrictions but not Paris

Some two thirds of the area's intensive care patients are being treated in the Bordeaux’ hospitals. 

Last week, 147 new hospitalisations were counted in Bordeaux, compared to 82 the week before.

Vulnerable and elderly

The PM said on Friday that the mounting pressure on hospitals in Bordeaux and Marseille was largely due to an increase in the number of elderly infected.

To protect the elderly and vulnerable in Bordeaux, Buccio said decided to limit the number of visits to two per week per resident in Ehpad (the French term for elderly nursing homes).

Nice has also limited visits to nursery homes for elderly.

Buccio also said authorities would open new test centres in Bordeaux “as of this week” as part of the strategy to protect the vulnerable and elderly.

Across France, local health authorities have struggled to keep up with the high level of demand that has seen their capacities strained causing long lines outside testing centres.

READ ALSO: How France's 'chaotic' Covid-19 testing strategy is causing a real headache

The general line in France is that anyone who could be at risk of having the virus, either if they have symptoms or if they have been in touch with someone who tests positive, should get tested.

The PM on Friday said authorities would need o realign their strategies to prioritise vulnerable groups and Buccio now urged mayors in Gironde would need to “use their municipal registers to identify the most vulnerable citizens and call them regularly,” like they did during a heatwave.

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TRAVEL NEWS

Ryanair threatens to shut its operations at Bordeaux airport

Ryanair on Wednesday threatened to shut its base at Bordeaux if the southwestern French airport raises its fees, putting 120 jobs at risk according to a union.

Ryanair threatens to shut its operations at Bordeaux airport

“The airport I think wants to double our cost, we’re not willing to pay double the cost at Bordeaux,” Michael O’Leary, head of the low-cost Irish airline, told AFP.

“I think there’s a real risk we might close the base in Bordeaux maybe at the end of the summer season,” he said on the sidelines of an airline conference in Brussels.

“We have three aircraft based there, we’ve got a very successful operation, lots of good employees. But if the response of the airport is ‘pay us double the fees’, the answer is no. We’ll move the aircraft somewhere else.”

The airport said in a statement to AFP that it “regrets that Ryanair has informed its employees, without talking to Bordeaux airport, of the possibility of closing its base”.

It added that it “is regrettable that Ryanair and its management make totally erroneous comments about the level of charges at the airport”.

On Tuesday, the SNPNC-FO union expressed its “profound concern” about Ryanair’s threats, which it said concerned 120 jobs.

Bordeaux-Merignac in 2023 was the eighth busiest French airport with 6.6 million passengers.

However, this figure is just 85.5 percent of pre-Covid 2019 levels whereas the average for French airports was 92.7 percent.

Bordeaux’s airport was particularly hit by the end of its flights to Paris, victim of a French government ban on any domestic flights that can be replaced by train in less than three hours.   

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