AMN/ WEB DESK

Police have intercepted hundreds of vehicles trying to enter Paris as part of a protest against France’s coronavirus regulations.
Authorities have deployed more than 7,000 officers over the next three days in a bid to stop the demonstrators.
The groups were inspired by the self-styled Canadian “Freedom Convoy” which has disrupted trade on the US border and occupied streets in Ottawa.

Similar demonstrations have started to spread around the world.
Austria and Belgium have banned such convoys from entering their capitals, with copycat demonstrations also emerging in Australia, New Zealand and the Netherlands.

On Saturday, police in Paris said they had intercepted hundreds of vehicles heading into the city and issued nearly 300 tickets to drivers, as well as arresting seven people. Two were allegedly carrying knives, hammers and petrol canisters, and five were allegedly carrying slingshots.

Prime Minister Jean Castex said on Friday that authorities would be very firm if the group tries to block the French capital. The right to demonstrate and to have an opinion are a constitutionally guaranteed right in our republic and in our democracy. The right to block others or prevent coming and going is not, he told media. Mr Castex also objected to the demonstrators calling themselves a Freedom Convoy.

The word freedom should not be associated with virulent attacks against vaccination, he said, because freedom is not contaminating others.