"It's like a tooth extraction... All this for a four-hour ceremony!" said one of Paris' incensed Seine booksellers. /CFP
Paris booksellers, who have operated from the same little dark green kiosks on the banks of the Seine for more than a century, are incensed over plans to remove them for the opening ceremony of the 2024 Olympics.
The world's largest open-air bookshop, Parisian booksellers have been operating on the banks of the Seine for 450 years. Installed along more than three kilometers of the Seine and declared a UNESCO World Heritage site, the 240 bouquinistes make use of some 900 green boxes to house some 300,000 old books and a great number of journals, stamps and trading cards.
Many are now refusing to be moved by the authorities to provide security for the opening ceremony of the Olympics in the French capital next summer. However, in a test run last week, four of the stands were lifted by a crane three meters above the ground in preparation for next years game - drawing consternation and anger from a small group of booksellers gathered nearby.
Employees load one of the removed boxes of a Parisian "bouquiniste" (bookseller) on to a trailer, working on the bank of the Seine River. /Miguel Medina/AFP
Paris city hall official Pierre Rabadan said at the weekend that the exercise to move the boxes went off without a hitch. "Today we are sure we can move - that is to say remove and then put back - boxes in good conditions in a reasonable time," he said.
Paris police chief Laurent Nunez, in a bid to calm outraged booksellers or 'bouquinistes', stressed that the stands would "only be removed when strictly necessary, notably for security reasons," adding that he was aware of the importance of bouquinistes as an attraction of the capital.
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Already struggling to bounce back from shutdowns during the COVID pandemic and a longer-run loss of interest from locals, the booksellers are refusing to miss out on the 16 million tourists expected for the Games.
"It's like a tooth extraction!" Michel Bouetard, general secretary of the Cultural Association of Booksellers of Paris, said. "All this for a four-hour ceremony! The Olympic Games have achieved what the wars (World Wars I and II) have not been able to do - to make us disappear," he fumed.
Ordered by the Paris Police Prefecture, the City of Paris is dismantling and reassembling the booksellers boxes situated on the route of the opening ceremony of the 2024 Olympic Games. /Miguel Medina/AFP
Paris's city hall is planning a spectacular opening ceremony on July 26 next year - the first time the event is being held outdoors - on a stretch of the Seine river along the city's most touristy parts. The Paris police has ordered the removal of some 600 of the 900 kiosks before the ceremony over security concerns with fears they could be used to conceal explosive devices during the grand opening with a parade of nearly 11,000 athletes along the river.
"All this is over the top, we aren't sure that they will return," said Jerome Callais, the president of the booksellers' association.
Historic moment
It is the sole livelihood for many of the 230-odd booksellers whose stalls flank the city's famous Left and Right banks. "What will they do if they cannot work for several weeks?" said Callais.
Some elected officials have backed them. "We are against this, all this has been decided to make space for advertising along the banks," said Corine Faugeron, head of the Greens group in the Paris City Council.
Parisian booksellers have been operating on the banks of the Seine for 450 years. /Miguel Medina/AFP
Others have appealed to President Emmanuel Macron to halt the initiative. Francis Robert, a bookseller for 43 years, said he had met with French leader in October, when he passed by the riverbank.
"He told us 'I am aware, I will defend you, you are part of Paris'," Robert said. "But he is above the prefect of Paris, he can just tell them to let us remain."
Another bookseller added: "Why do we need to remove when the security barriers will be put up one-and-a-half meters from the quays?"
Last week's test run ended shortly after midnight, with the four boxes being planted back to where they have stood for decades. "It's a historic moment," said a teary-eyed bookseller.
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