On Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron announced a new coronavirus lockdown until at least December 1, hoping to bring under control an outbreak that is poised to overwhelm hospitals in a matter of days.
Macron said: “The virus is spreading across France at a speed that even the most pessimistic did not predict.”
He admitted that a curfew for Paris and other major cities imposed two weeks ago had failed to stop a second wave of cases that has sent the death count in France to nearly 35,000.
Macron said: “As elsewhere in Europe, we are overwhelmed by a second wave that will probably be more difficult and deadly than the first. If we did nothing… within a few months we would have at least 400,000 additional deaths.”
Starting Thursday night, bars, restaurants and non-essential businesses will be forced to close, and written statements will be required for people to leave their homes.
“Stay at home as much as possible, and respect the rules,” he urged.
But unlike during the two-month lockdown imposed last spring, students up to high-school level will continue to go to school. Universities, which have been the source of several virus clusters since September, will have online classes only.
Factories and farms will also be allowed to operate, and some public services will function, to limit the economic damage that would come from shutting down the country completely.
The economy must not stop, nor collapse,” Macron said, though working from home will be the norm for companies that can accomodate it.
He promised additional financial relief for businesses, acknowledging that many were hoping to stay open ahead of the crucial holiday season that now seems jeopardised.

