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Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera
World

Paris heads into curfew as Europe battles soaring COVID caseload

Millions of Europeans are facing tough new coronavirus restrictions as governments try to combat spiralling infections. On Saturday, Paris and other French cities will be placed under a nighttime curfew which will last for at least a month. Meanwhile, the United Kingdom is banning mixed household gatherings in the capital city of London, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel has urged citizens to stay at home whenever possible after 7,830 cases emerged over 24 hours. “We have to do everything to prevent the virus from spreading out of control. Every day counts,” Merkel said in a weekly video podcast on Saturday. Cases of the disease, which has upended life across the globe and wreaked social and economic havoc, have been soaring beyond levels seen in the first wave earlier this year when many countries sought to stem the tide with lockdowns of varying degree. The World Health Organization (WHO) dubbed a 44 percent rise in European cases in a week as “very concerning”. In the face of the surge, governments have been forced to implement ever tighter measures to control the virus’s spread, while trying to avoid full-on lockdowns. Separately, Belgium’s foreign minister, Sophie Wilmes, became the latest politician to test positive for the novel coronavirus. “My COVID test result is positive. Contamination probably occurred within my family circle given the precautions taken outside my home,” she said on Twitter. About 20 million people in Paris and several other cities are under a nighttime curfew [File: Thomas Coex/AFP]The virus has now killed 1.1 million people across the planet since it first emerged in China in December, with the United States suffering the most deaths of any country at more than 218,000. About 20 million people in Paris and several other French cities were facing the start of a 9:00pm-6:00am (19:00-04:00 GMT) curfew after the country on Thursday saw a new high of 30,000 cases in 24 hours in one of Europe’s major hot spots. “It’s terrible. It feels to me like being back in March,” Hocine Saal, head of emergency services at the hospital in the Paris suburb of Montreuil, told AFP – adding that rising numbers of non-coronavirus patients made coping “really difficult”. In the UK, which has Europe’s highest death toll at more than 43,000, restrictions are being ramped up with bans on indoor meetings between members of different households in London and several other English cities. About 28 million people – almost half of the population of the UK – are now subject to tight social restrictions. But some cities have seen angry protests at what some people see as a return to a virtual lockdown. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said local restriction policies, designed to spare a new full-scale lockdown, cannot be “pain-free”. style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute; top: 0; bottom: 0; right: 0; left: 0;">
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