Junior health minister, Nora Berra, advises homeless to "stay indoors" during cold snap!

The cold spell throughout much of Europe is the news at the moment and it has been for the past week.

Here in France there's unlikely to be a let-up in the cold spell until next weekend according to the national meteorological (try saying that after a few bevvies) office Météo France.

Prime time TV news and radio programmes are typically dedicating plenty of air time to - among other aspects - the freezing temperatures, burst pipes, electricity consumption, the danger of blackouts, and the plight of the homeless.

Cue the junior minister for health, Nora Berra, whose job you would imagine is one that would require her being particularly sensitive to the needs of the more vulnerable - especially during weather extremes.

And such was the case at the weekend when Berra helpfully wrote on her blog her recommendations as to how those most at risk - the homeless, infants, the elderly, or people with chronic cardiovascular or respiratory problems - could cope with the cold spell.

A few lines later came her words of wisdom beginning with, "In the case of an extreme drop in temperature, I recommend to those most vulnerable to stay indoors."

Yep. She was apparently telling the homeless that they shouldn't venture outside.

Duh.

As the Nouvel Obs website pointed out, the Net was soon abuzz with reactions to Berra's blunder with Twitter users poking fun at the minister by recommending that, "the homeless also eat five fruit and vegetables each day for a healthy diet" or suggesting they "wear fur coats rather than jogging suits because they would keep them warmer."

Berra responded by amending her blog and, as Le Monde wrote, dropping the homeless from her original list of the "most vulnerable" and giving them a whole sentence at the end of her entry with a reminder that, "if you see a homeless person on the street who seems to need help because of the cold, call 115 (an emergency service for the homeless) to report it without delay."

Seemingly unwilling to admit that she had made any sort of mistake, Berra also answered her critics by saying that it had been an "error of interpretation" and writing a shorter entry (Tweetedinsisting that, "there are some subjects which do not lend themselves to irony."

Well, there's nothing like an apology...and that's...

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Comment by Andrew Hearne on February 8, 2012 at 10:43

;-D

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