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December 25, 2015

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Quiet Christmas in Paris as capital still on edge after terrorist attacks

IT was a subdued Christmas Eve in Paris yesterday, with tourist numbers down, security bolstered at shops and churches, and locals still on edge after last month’s jihadist attacks.

Heavily armed soldiers patrolled outside the iconic Galeries Lafayette and Printemps department stores in the city center, still doing a brisk last-minute Christmas trade but notably less crowded than usual.

“It’s a lot quieter,” said taxi driver Belkassem. “I feel bad for the hotels and restaurants because there are a lot fewer tourists in town this year and this is a crucial time of year for them.”

The famous “bateaux-mouches” boats that carry millions of tourists each year along the Seine have reported a 15-30 percent drop in business since the attacks of November 13 which left 130 dead and hundreds injured.

It is not only France that is feeling the tension this festive season. Christians around the world are bracing for potential attacks at a symbolic time of year. But Paris — the world’s most-visited city — has naturally taken the worst blow in the wake of last month’s attacks, with flight reservations down nearly a third compared with a year earlier.

Tourist guide Cecile Reverdy described a massive fall in business from some countries.

“There are around 30 percent less Chinese — only 30 percent because the Chinese are pretty daring,” she told France television.

“But for other languages, in Japanese or American, there is a drop of practically 80 percent.”

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo has sought to reassure visitors and put a brave face on the economic damage.

“There is a great resilience in this city,” she said recently.

“Of course, there are worries and we will never forget the victims, but activity is restarting.”

For those who treat Christmas as a religious holiday, the attacks have brought other ominous changes.

Unprecedented security checks have been put in place at many of France’s 50,000 churches, as bags are checked and visitors asked to open their coats to check for guns or explosive vests.

The government called on congregations “to pay particular attention to abandoned packages or bags,” saying Christmas church services “could constitute targets of exceptional symbolic force.”

France only narrowly escaped a church attack earlier this year, when a 24-year-old Algerian, Sid Ahmed Ghlam, accidentally shot himself in the leg.

Police discovered an arsenal of weapons, tactical gear and jihadist documents in his car and student flat, as well as detailed plans to attack churches.

But the atmosphere of fear could nonetheless boost attendance.

“There will be a lot of people at Christmas, maybe more this year given what we’re living through,” said Olivier Dumas, spokesman for the Conference of French Bishops.

“The Sundays after the attacks of November 13, we saw more people in our churches. People had a need to look inward, to reflect on life and society.”

In Somalia, religious authorities have canceled Christmas entirely out of fear that festivities could attract violence.

“We are warning against the celebration of such events which are not relevant to the principles of our religion,” said Sheikh Nur Barud Gurhan, of the Supreme Religious Council.

He warned they could provoke the al-Qaida-linked Shebab “to carry out attacks.”

All of which pales in comparison to the fear of celebrating Christmas in the Syrian town of Sadad, on the front lines with the Islamic State group.

Only a few families remain in Sadad, once a Syriac Orthodox-majority town in the center of the country.

“I haven’t put up a Christmas tree in my house for the past four years because the situation does not allow us to, and because I can’t find a place for joy in my home,” said Youssef, a 65-year-old man whose family has fled to a safer village.




 

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