• Tuesday, April 16, 2024
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French government to allow more fans into stadiums

French government to allow more fans into stadiums

Lawmakers in France have agreed to allow larger crowds into stadiums in areas where the coronavirus is less prevalent and if venues are big enough.

Attendances at sports events are capped at 5,000, but are limited to 1,000 in areas where there are larger outbreaks of Covid-19, such as in the Mediterranean city of Marseille.

Currently, no allowances are made for the capacity of venues, and the existing rules meant no more than 1,000 spectators were able to attend Marseille’s Ligue 1 game against Lille last weekend, despite their Stade Velodrome home having a capacity of 67,000.

Sacha Houlie, an MP from the same La Republique en Marche party as President Emmanuel Macron, said before a committee at France’s National Assembly that adapting the rules was a “common sense” move as he pointed out that currently 1,000 people could also pack into a smaller venue where “health guidelines cannot be respected”.

An amendment to the current law was put to a vote and passed, with lawmakers stressing the economic importance to clubs of having spectators in stadiums.

It means that crowds could be limited to 10 percent of capacity in “red zones” where the virus is more prevalent, but increased to 50 percent of capacity in “green zones”.

The measure must still be passed through the National Assembly on October 1, but comes in contrast to the situation in the UK, where plans to bring fans back into English sports venues on a socially distanced basis from next month have been scrapped because of fears over rising infection numbers.