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Stena Line to end popular France-Ireland ferry crossing
Rival operators will continue to serve Cherbourg port as passenger numbers on route increase
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Red heatwave alerts continue as storms sweep across France
South-west and Brittany are the only areas likely to avoid storms this evening after several temperature records were broken in the south yesterday
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Air traffic controllers’ strike: Paris and south of France airports to face major disruption
Half of flights in Nice and Corsica, and a quarter in Paris are cancelled on July 3. Disruption is also expected on July 4 just before the French school holidays begin
Shops: France considering Sunday opening in December
The government is said to be 'favourable' to the idea put forward by unions - as La Poste warns against parcel delivery scams

Industry Minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher said in an interview with news source yesterday (November 22) that the government was looking “favourably†on a proposal to open shops on Sundays in December.
She said: “We are looking at this approach favourably, even more so as it would allow the respect of [health] measures. But our guide is the balance between the economy and health.â€
Ms Pannier-Runacher also said that proposals to allow shops to stay open later in the evening in December were under discussion.
Post office warns of parcel delivery scam
This comes as postal service La Poste are alerting customers to a new scam targeting parcels - the number of which being delivered has risen due to a spike in online shopping under lockdown.
Gabriel de Brosses, head of cybersecurity at La Poste, told news source some customers have notified the service that they have received an SMS asking them to pay €2 in order for a parcel to be delivered to them. He said such scams had risen while people were working from home this year and had therefore been more likely to make purchases online.
The SMS states that the €2 is to cover postage fees, but this is false. La Poste does not ask people to pay to receive packages.
The scam aims to get people who receive the message to reveal their bank details. The message contains a link leading to a page where payment details can be entered and then reused by the scam operators. Mr de Brosse said: “People enter the details for their bank cards and that’s how they are scammed.â€
He added: “Do not click on links in emails. Never click on a link sent by SMS.â€
If you have already clicked on a link that you think may be a scam, contact your bank for further advice.
You can also notify the government service for deactivating online scams at: