Revellers booked in France for violating Covid curbs

Published January 3, 2021
DJs oversee proceedings at a huge illegal rave in a disused warehouse in Brittany, northwestern France, on Dec 31 2020. — AFP
DJs oversee proceedings at a huge illegal rave in a disused warehouse in Brittany, northwestern France, on Dec 31 2020. — AFP

RENNES: Hundreds of revellers were booked for breaking coronavirus restrictions as an illegal rave in northwestern France ended on Saturday after more than two days of partying that saw clashes with the police.

Police had failed to stop the underground event, which drew around 2,500 people from Thursday night in two disused warehouses in Lieuron, south of the city of Rennes in Brittany.

Such mass gatherings are banned across France to prevent the spread of Covid-19, and a nationwide 8:00 pm curfew — which was not lifted for New Year — has been in force across the country.

Techno music blared out during the night from the warehouses, which had been transformed into illegal nightclubs for partygoers who had flocked to the site from across France and even from abroad.

The local prefecture said on Satur­day the music had been switched off and sound systems dismantled after two nights, and the first revellers began leaving the site before dawn.

By 10:15 am it was under the control of police, the local prefecture said.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said in a tweet that police had booked more than 1,200 people and seized a truck, sound equipment and generators from the site of the “illegal rave party”. The large police presence at the site had led to the break-up of the event “without violence”, he added.

The regional prefect, Emmanuel Berthier, said 800 people had been booked specifically for coronavirus-related offences such as failing to respect the curfew restrictions or wear masks, or for participating in an illegal assembly.

Police fined several hundred others for use of narcotics, he told reporters.

Police on access roads were checking all those leaving the site, on foot or in vehicles, using torches to check their eyes for signs of drugs use, an AFP photographer said.

Police reinforcements continued to arrive and close off the site in a calm atmosphere on Saturday morning, the photographer said.

“It’s been a year since we could do anything,” said 24-year-old partygoer Antoine. The salesman was part of a group of five from Brittany that attended the rave.

With drawn faces but with beers still in their hands, the group said they “had come to celebrate the 31st here because it was a huge party”.

“We knew what we were risking... we had to party, for a year everything has been stuck,” said one of the group, a 20-year-old waitress.

Alexis, a 22-year-old baker, said “at one point you say to yourself: `I am going to force my New Year’.” He added that the rave had even been reported in the New York Times, saying “it was the biggest party of the year”.

‘Lives in danger’

French authorities have been worried about mass rave parties throughout the pandemic, but New Year’s Eve was a particular concern.

On Thursday night the police had tried to “prevent the event but faced fierce hostility from many partygoers” who set one of their cars on fire and threw bottles and stones, the prefecture said Friday.

The health authorities in Brittany noted the “high risk of the spread of Covid-19” at the event, and called on those who took part to undergo coronavirus tests and self-isolate immediately for seven days.

Published in Dawn, January 3rd, 2021

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