COVID 19 Cases in France Is Doubling Rapidly

COVID 19 Cases in France Is Doubling Rapidly
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France: New coronavirus infections have nearly doubled in France in recent weeks as Prime Minister Jean Castex warned that the country had been going "the wrong way" for two weeks.

The health ministry reported 1,397 new infections of Covid-19 since Monday. Fourteen people have died.

A ban on meetings of more than 5,000 people has been extended to 30 October.

Mr Castex also asked local authorities to further extend the requirement to wear face masks in public.

"The epidemiological situation, which we are following very closely, is deteriorating: 2,000 new cases per day compared to 1,000 three weeks ago," Mr Castex said at a press conference in Montpellier.

"About 25 new clusters are identified every day compared to five three weeks ago," he added.

It is already compulsory to wear face coverings nationwide on public transport and in indoor spaces including shops and government offices.

Local authorities have the ability to impose mask-wearing and some have introduced it in outdoor spaces, including Paris tourist hot spots and the banks of the River Seine.

More than 30,000 people have already died from the disease in France, which experienced a significant wave of cases in March and April.

An additional 14 people have died since Monday, according to the health ministry.

Its death toll remains the seventh highest in the world, although it is far below the US and Brazil where more than 100,000 have died in each country, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Following a national lockdown, restrictions in France were eased in May and June and tourism permitted as the summer holiday season began and foreign visitors allowed.

Public gatherings of more than 5,000 people, including concerts or sports events, were due to resume at the end of August, but Mr Castex has extended the ban until 30 October.

At the weekend, more than 10,000 people attended an illegal rave in remote and sparsely populated mountain area Lozere in southern France.