Overview
- French officials announced on Monday that roughly 14,000 people — about 7,160 police officers, 6,100 gendarmes, 900 military personnel and magistrates — will be deployed to secure the G7 summit in Évian from June 15 to 17.
- The plan includes lake patrols on Lake Geneva, flight restrictions, anti‑drone systems and coordination with Swiss forces and prosecutors to protect arriving delegations and control transits through Geneva.
- Prefect Emmanuelle Dubée and security commanders said the measures respond to an 'extremely tense' international context and specific threats of terrorism, sabotage, cyberattacks and large-scale public disorder.
- Local enforcement has already started targeted actions, such as CRS mountain units removing an anti‑G7 banner in Étrembières, while the No‑G7 coalition is weighing a permitted protest in Annemasse under strict prefectural conditions.
- Merchants and restaurateurs in Évian warn that the Pass G7 system and heavy security could deter customers and empty the town center, risking short‑term economic loss during the summit.