By Julie M. Photos by Laurent P. Published January 12, 2021 at 7:48 p.m. Updated January 12, 2021 at 7:50 p.m.
The incidence rate by department, this new indicator to be followed very closely, makes it possible to determine which are the French departments for which the curfew is advanced from 6 p.m. Indeed, the departments which exceed the threshold of 200 per 100,000 inhabitants must take new measures to fight against the spread of the epidemic and in particular the implementation of an extension of their curfew from 6 p.m. We discover together the incidence rates of each department and the new departments threatened on Tuesday, January 12, 2021.
The new indicator to follow closely at the start of the year, it is the incidence rate of each department. Indeed, it makes it possible to estimate the share of people infected in each department and there is a corresponding number of people tested positive over the last 7 days out of 100,000 inhabitants.
Find below the incidence rate by department at Tuesday, January 12, 2021. We noted in rouge the departments for which an advanced curfew from 6 p.m. is already in effect or planned in the coming days and in yellow departments that are approaching the 200 per 100,000 threshold and orange those who have already exceeded this threshold but for whom the curfew has not yet been announced. We put in vert the departments for which the threshold is less than 100 per 100,000. Not that these areas are considered safe, but for now they are not threatened by an advance of the curfew.
- 01 – Ain – Bourg-en-Bresse – 215
- 02 – Aisne – Laon – 192
- 03 – Allier – Moulins – 257
- 04 – Alpes-de-Haute-Provence – Digne-les-Bains — 206
- 05 — Hautes-Alpes — Gap — 296
- 06 — Alpes-Maritimes — Nice — 460
- 07 – Ardèche – Privas – 209
- 08 – Ardennes – Charleville-Mézières – 275
- 09 – Ariège – Foix – 217
- 10 – Dawn – Troyes – 195
- 11 – Aude – Carcassonne – 180
- 12 – Aveyron – Rodez – 113
- 13 – Bouches-du-Rhône – Marseille – 272
- 14 – Calvados – Caen – 158
- 15 – Cantal – Aurillac — 138
- 16 – Charente – Angoulême — 92
- 17 – Charente-Maritime – La Rochelle — 92
- 18 – Cher – Bourges — 279
- 19 – Corrèze – Tulle — 129
- 2A – Corse-du-Sud – Ajaccio — 78
- 2B – Haute-Corse – Bastia — 82
- 21 – Côte-d’Or – Dijon – 260
- 22 – Côtes-d’Armor – Saint-Brieuc — 64
- 23 – Creuse – Gueret — 129
- 24 – Dordogne – Périgueux — 101
- 25 – Doubs – Besançon – 334
- 26 – Drôme – Valence — 259
- 27 – Eure – Évreux — 111
- 28 – Eure-et-Loir – Chartres — 146
- 29 – Finistère – Quimper — 68
- 30 – Gard – Nîmes — 193
- 31 – Haute-Garonne – Toulouse — 157
- 32 – Gers – Also — 164
- 33 – Gironde – Bordeaux — 149
- 34 – Hérault – Montpellier — 178
- 35 – Ille-et-Vilaine – Rennes — 123
- 36 – Indre – Châteauroux — 201
- 37 – Indre-et-Loire – Tours — 158
- 38 – Isère – Grenoble — 225
- 39 – Jura – Lons-le-Saunier – 363
- 40 – Landes – Mont-de-Marsan — 166
- 41 – Loir-et-Cher – Blois — 137
- 42 – Loire – Saint-Étienne — 220
- 43 – Haute-Loire – Le Puy-en-Velay — 236
- 44 – Loire-Atlantique – Nantes — 108
- 45 – Loiret – Orleans — 179
- 46 — Lot — Cahors — 112
- 47 – Lot-et-Garonne – Agen — 146
- 48 – Lozère – Mende — 197
- 49 – Maine-et-Loire – Angers — 118
- 50 – Manche – Saint-Lô — 159
- 51 – Marne – Châlons-en-Champagne – 237
- 52 – Haute-Marne – Chaumont – 331
- 53 – Mayenne – Laval – 156
- 54 – Meurthe-et-Moselle – Nancy – 271
- 55 – Meuse – Bar-le-Duc – 288
- 56 – Morbihan – Vannes — 69
- 57 – Moselle – Metz – 245
- 58 – Nièvre – Nevers – 265
- 59 – Nord – Lille – 174
- 60 – Oise – Beauvais – 186
- 61 – Orne – Alençon — 195
- 62 – Pas-de-Calais – Arras – 168
- 63 – Puy-de-Dome – Clermont-Ferrand — 212
- 64 – Pyrénées-Atlantiques – Pau — 140
- 65 – Hautes-Pyrénées – Tarbes — 198
- 66 – Pyrénées-Orientales – Perpignan — 172
- 67 – Bas-Rhin – Strasbourg – 196
- 68 – skin rhin – Colmar — 239
- 69 – Rhône – Lyon — 221
- 70 – Haute-Saône – Vesoul – 309
- 71 – Saône-et-Loire – Mâcon – 264
- 72 – Sarthe – Le Mans — 112
- 73 – Savoie – Chambéry — 200
- 74 – Haute-Savoie – Annecy — 226
- 75 – Paris – Paris – 191
- 76 – Seine-Maritime – Rouen — 195
- 77 – Seine-et-Marne – Melun – 174
- 78 – Yvelines – Versailles – 158
- 79 – Deux-Sèvres – Niort — 242
- 80 – Somme – Amiens – 223
- 81 – Tarn – Albi — 186
- 82 – Tarn-et-Garonne – Montauban — 120
- 83 – Var – Toulon — 286
- 84 – Vaucluse – Avignon — 265
- 85 – Vendée – La Roche-sur-Yon — 128
- 86 – Vienne – Poitiers — 101
- 87 – Haute-Vienne – Limoges — 127
- 88 – Vosges – Épinal – High Vigilance — 238
- 89 – Yonne – Auxerre – 198
- 90 — Territory of Belfort – Belfort – 341
- 91 – Essonne – Évry – 182
- 92 – Hauts-de-Seine – Nanterre – 182
- 93 – Seine – Saint-Denis – Bobigny – 181
- 94 – Val-de-Marne – Créteil – 209
- 95 – Val-d’Oise – Cergy-Pontoise – 201
- 971 – Guadeloupe – Basse-Terre — 31
- 972 – Martinique – Fort-de-France — 23
- 973 – Guyana – Cayenne — 293
- 974 – The meeting – Saint-Denis — 32
- 976 — Mayotte — Dzaoudzi — 87
Curfew at 6 p.m. in France, the list of departments concerned or threatened
While a third wave of coronavirus is looming on the horizon, national as well as local reconfinement has been ruled out by the government for the time being. It is finally an advanced curfew at 6 p.m. and located in the departments where the virus is most active that was decided. Discover the list of the 25 departments currently concerned, and the next 3 departments threatened by the widening of the curfew.
Curfew at 6 p.m.: the departments of Var and Drôme concerned from this Tuesday
Unlike the United Kingdom or Germany, the French government seems to have ruled out the option of total containment to counter the third wave of the epidemic. However, Prime Minister Jean Castex warns of the danger of the current epidemic situation, during a press conference this Thursday, January 7, 2021. The curfew is maintained at 8 p.m. everywhere in France, with the exception of 25 departments concerned by the enlargement. The Var and the Drôme will join the list tomorrow. Haute-Savoie remains with a curfew at 8 p.m.
Covid: curfew from 6 p.m., the list of new departments threatened
During an interview with France 2 News, the Minister of Health Olivier Véran announced on Tuesday, December 29, 2020 that an extension of the current curfew to fight against Covid was envisaged from January 2, 2021 for departments and metropolitan areas where the incidence rate was above the threshold set by the State. A measure now enacted for 25 departments. This Thursday, January 7, 2021, the Prime Minister confirmed that 10 new departments were threatened by the widening of the curfew. 3 other departments have an incidence rate close to the threshold of 200 per 100,000 inhabitants.
Covid: in Île-de-France, an extended curfew before new confinement in Paris?
While the dangerous holiday season is now behind us, the epidemic continues to gain ground in the departments of the Paris basin, with an incidence rate that is dangerously close to 200 cases per 100 000 people in some departments. For the moment, the curfew is maintained at 8 p.m., but it could be extended to 6 p.m., as for 23 other departments. Others also evoke a new confinement.
Curfew in France: how long will it last?
Since December 15, 2020, the French have swapped confinement for the curfew. Now, between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m., or even 6 p.m. for some departments, everyone must stay at home. Each outing must be justified by a valid reason and a derogatory certificate. But until when is this curfew in place?
Coronavirus: curfew, wearing a mask, the amount of the fine in the event of non-compliance
In France, as the coronavirus epidemic is accelerating, new restrictions have been put in place, including the curfew from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. or the wearing of a mask depending on the area. So what penalties should we expect in the event of non-compliance?
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