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Teachers across France stage a one-day walkout over Covid rules.

Teachers across France staged a one-day walkout on Thursday to protest changing Covid testing rules that they say have disrupted classes and are now too lax to protect against the Omicron variant that is tearing across the nation.

Many teachers’ unions also planned protest marches, with one of the largest expected to start in Paris on Thursday afternoon. The education ministry said that nearly 40 percent of elementary school teachers and nearly a quarter of secondary school teachers were on strike, although the unions put those figures much higher.

The ministry did not say how many schools were closed for the day, but one of the biggest unions said it expected about half of elementary schools to close because of the walkout.

The stop-work action, which most of the country’s teaching unions supported, posed a serious challenge for President Emmanuel Macron’s government, which has taken pride in keeping its schools open longer than many other European countries during the pandemic.

“I fundamentally believe the choice that we made to keep schools open is the right choice,” Mr. Macron said at a news conference on Tuesday.

But the policies put in place to keep schools open have come at a cost. The government set up complex testing rules meant to spare whole classes from being sent home or entire schools from having to shut down over a small number of positive cases. Officials then changed the rules twice in a matter of days, confusing millions of parents and teachers. The testing protocols led to snaking lines of exasperated parents and children standing in the cold outside pharmacies and medical laboratories.

To stave off a wave of growing anger, Prime Minister Jean Castex said on Monday that the protocols would be relaxed. Parents would no longer have to pick up their children immediately after a classmate tested positive, and exposed children no longer had to be tested at pharmacies and labs to return to class. Instead, the tests could be done at home.

But teachers said that the simplified rules increased risks of infections at school. They have also complained for weeks over a lack of equipment like air quality monitors and shortages of highly protective masks.

“They’ve opened school doors wide to Omicron and royally couldn’t give a damn about teaching personnel,” a union of school principals wrote on Twitter on Monday after Mr. Castex’s announcement.

France is now averaging nearly 300,000 newly reported coronavirus cases a day, almost six times as many as a month ago and far more than at any earlier point in the pandemic. Olivier Véran, the country’s health minister, said on Thursday that he had tested positive for Covid-19. Mr. Véran, who is fully vaccinated, said on Twitter that he would self-isolate and work remotely.”

The Coronavirus Pandemic: Key Things to Know


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The latest Covid data in the U.S. As the Omicron surge causes case counts to reach record highs and hospitalizations to surpass last winter’s peak, here’s how to think about the data and what it’s beginning to show about Omicron’s potential toll and the growing gap in those vaccinated vs. unvaccinated.

Testing. In the absence of a national effort to make testing widely available, some big U.S. companies are putting their own testing services in place for their workers. Meanwhile, the White House promised to distribute millions of free tests to schools as many districts struggle with execution and resources.

Around the world. A spate of outbreaks in China weeks ahead of the Winter Olympics underscores the challenge of holding the Games while sticking to the country’s “zero Covid” policy. In Europe, the W.H.O. warned that over half the continent could be infected with Omicron in the next six to eight weeks.

Staying safe. Worried about spreading Covid? Keep yourself and others safe by following some basic guidance on when to test and how to use at-home virus tests (if you can find them). Here is what to do if you test positive for the coronavirus.

The surge in Covid infections has led to the closing of more than 10,000 classrooms in France, and tens of thousands of students are currently infected, according to the French authorities.

The walkout, which was planned earlier in the week, “demonstrates the growing despair in schools,” Snuipp-F.S.U., the leading union of elementary school personnel, said in a statement on Tuesday. “Not only does the current protocol fail to protect students, staff and their families, but it also completely disorganizes schools,” the statement read.

Although teachers’ strikes are common in France, they do not often unite as many unions as Thursday’s action. A major parents’ federation also called on parents to march side by side with teachers.

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