2020 in France

2020
in
France

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Decades:
  • 2000s
  • 2010s
  • 2020s
See also:Other events of 2020
History of France   Timeline   Years

Events in the year 2020 in France

Incumbents

Events

January

  • 3 January Villejuif stabbing where a man kills one person and wounds two others with a knife before the perpetrator is shot dead by police.
  • 18 January French police call for backup as protesters try to storm a theater where President Emmanuel Macron and his wife are watching The Fly.[1]
  • 20 January Annie Chapelier, member of the National Assembly for Gard's 4th constituency, leaves LREM. She denounces "an above-ground movement, indifferent to the territories" where "little more or less self-proclaimed chiefs" want to be superior to "a mass, insignificant in their eyes, who is asked for blind allegiance and obedience", as well as inaction in the face of the “climate emergency”.
  • 24 January The first cases of COVID-19 are confirmed in France:[2] one in Bordeaux, a Chinese native of Wuhan who lives and works in the Bordeaux region, and two in Paris, a couple of Chinese tourists.

February

  • 7 February Five new cases of COVID-19, four adults and one child, are announced by the Minister of Health Agnès Buzyn. The initial case is a British national returning from Singapore where he stayed from 20 to 23 January. He has arrived in France on January 24 for a four-day stay in the town of Les Contamines-Montjoie before returning to United Kingdom.
  • 8 February Triggering of the Alerte-Enlèvement Device (Alert-Removal Device): the plan is launched after the kidnapping of Vanille, a 1-year-old girl by her mother Nathalie, 40, in Angers, on 7 February around 5:30 p.m. His mother is found in Nantes on Sunday 9 February. A few hours later, the public prosecutor of Angers announces that the little girl has been found dead, in a clothing dumpster, and that her mother has admitted to having killed her. It is the first time since the launch of the Alert-Removal Device in France that the abducted child has been found dead.
  • 11 February Death of François André, member of the French National Assembly for Ille-et-Vilaine's 3rd constituency. He is replaced by his substitute.
  • 16 February Resignation of Agnès Buzyn, Minister of Solidarity and Health, following her candidacy for mayor of Paris.
  • 21 February Shutdown of reactor 1 at the Fessenheim Nuclear Power Plant.
  • 28 February 45th César Awards.
  • 29 February All indoor gatherings of more than 5,000 people are banned, over fears of the coronavirus.

March

April

  • 13 April President Emmanuel Macron makes a television address on coronavirus to the nation viewed by 36.7 million people.[3]

June

  • 11-17 June; 2020 Dijon riots: A 16-year old Chechen in assaulted in Dijon, leading to several violent clashes, including in the Grésilles district.[4]

August

Deaths

January

February

March

April

See also

Country overviews

References

  1. Police backup called to guard President Macron as protesters try to storm theater By Saskya Vandoorne, Milena Veselinovic, and Martin Goillandeau, CNN, 18 Jan 2020
  2. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/coronavirus-france-china-wuhan-virus-symptoms-outbreak-latest-a9301106.html
  3. Petski, Denise (2020-04-14). "French President Emmanuel Macron's Coronavirus TV Address Draws Record-Shattering 35M+ Viewers". Deadline. Retrieved 2020-04-20.
  4. Agence France-Presse (June 15, 2020). "French City Rocked by Unrest Blamed on Score-Settling Chechens". The Moscow Times.
  5. "Paris will host the European Athletics Championships 2020". european-athletics.org. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
  6. "Nathaël Julan (Guingamp) mort dans un accident de la route". lequipe.fr (in French). Retrieved 3 January 2020.
  7. "Décès du clarinettiste Guy Deplus". Res Musica (in French). Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  8. "Thomas, Guy (1934-....)". Catalogue général (in French).
  9. "Hommage à Philippe Malaurie (1925-2020)" [Homage to Philippe Malaurie (1925-2020)] (in French). University of Poitiers. Archived from the original on April 3, 2020.
  10. "Disparition : Arnold Sowinski, ancien entraîneur du RC Lens, est mort" [Disappearance: Arnold Sowinski, former coach of RC Lens, is dead] (in French). L'Équipe. April 2, 2020. Retrieved April 3, 2020.
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