France sees 36% rise in COVID-19 cases shortly after relaxing measures
A jogger passes a worker as she runs in front of Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel during a lockdown imposed by authorities in an attempt to halt the spread of the new coronavirus, Paris, Nov. 6, 2020. (AFP Photo)


France reported an average of close to 90,000 new coronavirus infections over the last seven days, marking a 36% rise from one week ago when most COVID-19 health protocol measures were lifted by the government just ahead of the country's elections.

New cases over the previous 24 hours published on Sunday stood at 81,283, pushing a seven-day moving average to 89,002, compared with just over 60,000 average new cases one week earlier. The number of cases per 100,000 inhabitants also reached its highest value level since Feb. 18.

The government of French President Emmanuel Macron, who will stand for reelection in less than three weeks' time followed by legislative elections later this year, decided to lift most COVID-19 restrictions on March 14, citing a positive trend.

This means people in France no longer have to wear COVID-19 face masks indoors, except for public transport, hospitals and other medical facilities. The government also lifted its COVID-19 vaccine pass requirement in places such as bars and cinemas.

New hospital admissions – seen as a key indicator by France's Health Minister Olivier Veran – decreased by only 1.7% week-on-week, the slowest decline since early February, potentially indicating a reversal of the previous trends.

The recent rise in new infections was particularly strong in France's eastern Alsace region, one of the zones that suffered most during the start of the pandemic, where authorities recorded well over 1,000 new cases per 100,000 inhabitants.

In Germany, new cases have also risen in recent days, reaching a new record of around 220,000 average new cases over the last seven days, according to data compiled by the Robert-Koch-Institute.