Among the tourists that were still braving visits, many took comfort in the extra security presence. Source: AP
GREY skies over a half-empty Eiffel Tower. Since last week’s terrorist attacks that left 17 victims and three gunmen dead, the swarms of sightseers have thinned below Paris’ most visited monument, baring the dull concrete of the giant plaza.
Just over a week after the attacks, only a handful of tourists were taking photos, and one or two having portraits sketched by resident artists.
The long lines that normally snake around the Eiffel Tower’s gargantuan pillars were a fraction of the length.
“It’s been so calm since the attacks. There’s hardly anyone at all,” sandwich seller Kamel Bougrab said across the street.
Tourism officials couldn’t give figures of the number of sightseers in the immediate aftermath of the attacks, but visits by The Associated Press to major sites and interviews with vendors indicated an initial drop in visitors.
A tourist reads the placard " VIGIPIRATE (security plan) Alert Attacks" in front of the Louvre museum in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015. Source: AP
An Eiffel Tower spokeswoman insisted that the attraction had recorded no drop in visits so far, compared to the relatively slow month of January 2014.
But no official statistics have yet been compiled, and the situation could still change, she said.
Among the tourists that were still braving visits, many took comfort in the extra security presence.
With 10,500 troops deployed across the country, including 6000 in the Paris region alone, the security operation put in motion after the attacks is the most extensive on French soil in recent history.
Lucinda Bay, 22, from Australia said she came to the French capital with her sister despite initial fears.
“I’m a bit nervous, but I guess this can happen anywhere. I wouldn’t want that to stop us visiting this beautiful city,” she said, looking up at the 300 metre Eiffel Tower.
Over in the Louvre, lines were shorter too.
A tourist couple takes a selfie in front of Notre Dame as a soldier looks on. Source: AP
The Louvre said that school visits to the Paris region, including museums, had been suspended by the Education Ministry because the capital was on “attack alert” status since last week. The Louvre normally receives several hundred schoolchildren a day, and their absence partly accounts for the thinner crowds. Among the measures following the terror raids was also an increase in police presence around airports, Jewish schools and media offices.
Yet the heavily-armed French police patrolling the streets also unsettled some, especially those from countries where police aren’t normally armed so visibly.
“Seeing huge machine gun rifles is quite scary,” said 20-year-old Australian student Mimi George.
“But I suppose it does make you feel safer in the end.”
Tourists take pictures of the Arc de Triomphe illuminated with the solidarity message "Paris is Charlie." Source: AP
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