The Farnesina invites those who travel to France to pay attention
The Farnesina invites those who travel to France to pay attention
The Farnesina invites those who travel to Paris and other places in France to pay attention due to the protests that have been taking place in the country for days. This is what we read on the Farnesina's "Safe Travel" website, according to which due to the protests "it is possible that there may be disruptions in road traffic. In the banlieues of Paris the bus and tram lines are interrupted from 9 pm while in the cities of Compiègne and Clamart a curfew has entered into force from 10 pm to 6 am, until Monday 3 July 2023 ". For this reason, the notice finally reads, "it is recommended to monitor the media, avoid the areas affected by the protests and follow the instructions of the local authorities".
Cities set on fire, public transport stopped at dusk, shops looted, a fringe of the police union on the verge of a dangerous nervous breakdown in France. President Emmanuel Macron withdrew from the final press conference of the European summit and returned to participate in the meeting of the government's crisis cell. After announcing his willingness to act drastically, and "without taboos", he then chose a lower profile, launching a video appeal to the parents of the protesters, "a third of whom - he said - are young and very young" .
Completely unpublished, Macron has asked the major managers of social channels, in particular TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram and Twitter, to remove videos and announcements of demonstrations. To avoid, he explained, that the protests find new fertile ground.The clashes, however, did not subside. This evening, police and demonstrators returned to face each other harshly in Marseille and Lyon. In the same minutes, interviewed on TF1, Minister Darmanin announced the mobilization of 45,000 police officers for the night, 5,000 more than the previous day.