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Notre-Dame spire ‘will rise again in time for Paris Olympics’

The spire of Paris' Notre-Dame cathedral, which toppled in a devastating 2019 fire, will rise again before next summer's Olympics in the French capital, the new chief of the mammoth reconstruction project said on Thursday.

Notre-Dame spire 'will rise again in time for Paris Olympics'
The spire of Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris collapsed during the fire in 2019. Photo by Geoffroy VAN DER HASSELT / AFP

Notre-Dame’s world-famous “silhouette has completely changed since the fire. I hope that by the Olympic Games we will have the great roof of the cathedral and the spire above it back,” said Philippe Jost, who took over from General Jean-Louis Georgelin after his death in an accident last month.

The opening ceremony of the Paris games is set to take place on the waters of the River Seine, which flows through the city centre and around the Ile-de-la-Cite, the island site of Notre-Dame.

“At that moment, everyone will see that we’re really very close to the reopening a few months later,” added Jost, who was formerly Georgelin’s right-hand man on the rebuild.

He told broadcaster Franceinfo that the general’s death in a mountain hiking accident “could have” slowed work but “in fact we’re really determined to keep up his efforts. We owe it to many people, but we also owe it to him”.

Towering 100 metres above ground level, the wooden spire will already be visible from the end of this year, Jost said, gradually emerging from scaffolding as its roofing is attached.

Inside the cathedral “there’s still scaffolding but you are struck by its brilliance when you enter,” he added, saying that restoration and cleaning work were “pretty much completed by now”.

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STRIKES

Olympic pay strike to ‘severely disrupt’ Paris public transport on Tuesday

A Tuesday rail strike over bonuses for Paris' July-August Olympic Games period will leave just one in five suburban commuter trains running on some lines in the French capital, operator SNCF have warned.

Olympic pay strike to 'severely disrupt' Paris public transport on Tuesday

Traffic will be “very severely disrupted”, SNCF said, with certain lines suspended outside peak hours.

The operator’s Transilien Paris regional network has urged people to work from home or find alternate transport on Tuesday, which follows a Monday public holiday.

Rail workers’ unions are pressuring SNCF in negotiations over bonuses for working through the Olympic period.

Their counterparts at transport operator RATP, which runs metro and bus services in Paris, have already secured an average 1,000-euro ($1,086) bonus, reaching up to 2,500 euros for the most in-demand train and bus drivers.

“We thought the talks were dragging on a bit and wanted to provoke something,” Fabien Villedieu of the SUD-Rail union told AFP on Friday.

“We have a heavy workload with 4,500 additional trains in August, so a whole range of our colleagues won’t be able to go on holiday,” he added.

Strikes and threats of industrial action during the Games have marked the months leading up to the event, including from rubbish collectors and government and medical workers.

Rubbish collectors this month won a pay rise on top of an Olympic bonus, heading off multiple days of walkouts flagged for later in May and over the period of the Games.

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