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France tells citizens to scrap fabric masks in favour of surgical

By RFI
France Gonzalo FuentesReuters
JAN 22, 2021 LISTEN
Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters

The French government has recommended that surgical masks be worn in public, saying handmade cloth masks do not provide enough filtering protection to contain the spread of the new highly contagious strains of coronavirus first identified in the UK and South Africa. 

Masks are already mandatory in public in France, but the government has not until now made recommendations about the type of masks.

French authorities are worried they could be hit by new, more contagious variants of the virus.

"The recommendation that I make to the French people is to no longer use fabric masks," Olivier Véran told French broadcaster TF1.

Véran also said it was very unlikely that restrictions on ski resorts -- a hotspot for the virus at the start of the pandemic -- would be lifted next month.

That effectively rules out a return to skiing in time for he February school holidays, normally the last peak skiing period of the season.

Véran said that the government could not rule out a tightening of coronavirus restrictions if the situation with virus transmission deteriorates.

"We could be forced to take tougher measures than those that the French people dealt with this autumn... That could go as far as a lockdown if the situation were to require it," he said.

France has reported over 71,000 coronavirus-related deaths since the pandemic began. It is now at 35% of its peak infection rate, according to Reuters data, well below its neighbour, Britain, which is at 70%. French schools are still open, and non-essential shops are allowed to trade.

However, French public health officials say they have detected a rise in transmission rates in the past few days and they are also wary of the spread of new, more contagious variants of COVID-19 which are prevalent in other countries.

(Reuters)

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