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VILLENEUVE-LA-GARENNE, France: French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday urged European neighbors to better coordinate cross-border virus restrictions as infections were on the rebound and as multiple countries imposed tests or quarantines on visitors from France.
Amid worries that France could become a new virus hotspot, Macron defended his governments push to restart the economy and its handling of the post-lockdown period. Over the summer, French people traveled around the country for family gatherings and dance parties blamed for fueling the recent rise in cases.
Our country needs to … learn to live with the virus in order to repair the economy, finance welfare aid like temporary jobless benefits, and educate its children, he said.
Paris imposed mask requirements everywhere in public starting Friday, and a fifth of French regions are now considered red zones where the virus is actively circulating. More than 6,000 new infections were reported Thursday, up from several hundred a day in May and June.
But hospitalizations and deaths remain relatively low, and the government is sticking to plans to reopen all its schools starting Tuesday, and the Tour de France is starting its three-week trek around the country Saturday.
Now that Britain, Germany and Belgium have imposed new restrictions on people arriving from all or parts of France, Macron called for better European coordination.
Lets have the same criteria, he said Friday. Lets not repeat the errors of March, when chaotic unilateral border closures left lines of trucks stuck on roads and travelers stranded.
He said it made no sense to close borders, particularly for millions of workers within the EUs travel-free zone who cross borders to work.
Speaking through a mask, he admitted that masks are bothersome, annoying but called it a reasonable constraint that we should accept for a certain time to revive the economy.
He also promised 15 billion euros ($17.8 billion) in state investment in projects to bring jobs and manufacturing back to France. He spoke after inaugurating a new production site at the Seqens pharmaceutical plant north of Paris.
France suffered shortages of masks, medicines and other medical supplies at the height of the virus crisis, notably because of its dependence on suppliers in China.
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