Spotlight on France - Podcast: Sick with coronavirus in France, new markets for asparagus, the first photo of the sun

--:--
It's possible that most coronavirus cases in France are not counted. We hear from one person who was diagnosed on the phone, and who waited out the quarantine at home, alone, with little to no official intervention. Also, an asparagus farmer is forced to find new ways to distribute after restaurants and markets are shuttered. And the French physicists who took the first-ever photo of the sun.

Covid-19 statistics in France are so far limited to deaths in hospitals and official tested cases, which raises the question of the real number of people infected and the actual death count. We speak to freelance journalist Fabien Jannic-Cherbonnel (@FabienJ), who came down with symptoms and was diagnosed as having the virus by a GP, but who does not count in the official statistics because he was never tested. He talks about what it's like to make your way through the non-emergency world of coronavirus in France. (Listen @3'50)

Agriculture in France has been hit by the lockdown and restrictions on movement brought in to try to stop the spread of the coronavirus. With restaurants and markets closed, farmers are worried about where to sell their harvests. The government has called on supermarkets to sell French-grown produce, but farmer Thibault de Vulpillieres, who grows and sells asparagus at the Cueillette Laverons, near Toulouse, says the prices being offered are absurdly low. He talks about how the lockdown has completely disrupted his supply chain, but that it is also an opportunity to develop contact with local customers - a silver living in a crisis. (Listen @13'30)

The French physicists who took the first photo of the sun on 2 April 1845. (Listen @11'00)

 

Spotlight on France is a podcast from Radio France International. Find us on iTunes (link here), Google podcasts (link here), or your favourite podcast app.
2 Apr 2020 English France News

Other recent episodes

Podcast: War on youth, Ionesco in Paris, French women's right to vote

Why French youth are once again under fire as the government vows to crack down on violent crime. The staying power of Ionesco's The Bald Soprano in one of Paris's smallest theatres. And why French women won the right to vote so much later than many of their European neighbours…
25 Apr 33 min

Podcast: France-Russia relations, hair discrimination, tax history

How France's new hardline position on Russia marks a major shift away from decades of pro-Russia policies. The fight to make hair discrimination illegal. And why VAT – a tax introduced 70 years ago – is so important to French finances, despite being deeply unequal. French President Emmanuel Macron has…
28 Mar 30 min

Podcast: #MeToo hits French cinema, movie theatre on wheels, bissextile news

How a wave of #MeToo allegations against French directors is shaking up the cinema industry; the Cinémobile movie theatre bringing culture to the countryside; and the satirical news rag that appears just once every four years, on 29 February. Seven years after the #MeToo movement shook Hollywood, Judith Godrèche and…
1 Mar 25 min

Podcast: French farmers protest, battling the mathematics gender gap

No quick fix for French farmers who have been protesting by laying siege to Paris. And it's just the latest in a long string of farmers' demonstrations over the last 100 years. Plus, why French girls are faring worse at maths than boys, and what to do about it. Farmers…
1 Feb 31 min