-
Dordogne mairie offers cages to catch boar devastating private gardens
Iron traps set up by hunting professionals can catch boar overnight
-
French weekly weather forecast August 18 - 22: heatwave ends but storms rush in
Temperatures in south-west will be 17C lower than at the end of last week
-
Aude deadly wildfire: why investigators suspect arson
Devastating blaze spread over 16,000 hectares, killing one person and injuring dozens of others
France's 3% tax to hit Google and Facebook
France is imposing a 3% tax on big digital companies.

Known as the “Gafa tax†after the US firms it targets (Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple), it starts this year and is imposed on annual turnover in France.
It is expected to bring in €450million this year.
France is the first country to impose this tax and wants other OECD countries to follow.
Firms such as Amazon and Google operate globally and take advantage of optimisation fiscale to declare advertising income in lower-tax countries.
The EU planned to bring in a “Gafa tax†but met opposition from countries such as Ireland and Luxembourg, which have low taxation rates.
Sweden is also opposed. Some countries fear the US will bring in a similar tax on EU firms.
Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire said: “It is better to have an imperfect solution than discussion without action.â€
The tax applies to all digital companies with global revenue above €750million, and above €25million in France. Around 30 companies are concerned, including Airbnb and Booking.