The French national anthem La Marseillaise, chants of "We're in the final" and a cacophony of car horns and fire crackers rang out over Paris on Tuesday as residents of the capital celebrated France's march to the World Cup final.
A
crowd of 20,000 gathered to watch Didier Deschamps' team beat Belgium
1-0 in their semi-final in Saint Petersburg on a giant screen at Paris'
historic Hotel de Ville, or town hall.
With
viewing space at a premium every vantage spot was occupied -- with fans
perched on trees, on top of vans, on dustbins and bus
shelters.
Samuel Umtiti's decisive goal in
the 51st minute triggered the waving of a sea of tricolor flags as
ecstatic supporters -- many in the national team's colours -- kissed and
hugged and danced.
"Vive la France, vive la Republique" shouted Alia and Sacha, two Parisian schoolchildren.
"We are so proud to be French tonight!" Alia explained as fire crackers exploded on the cobblestones.
Motorbikes,
cycles, cars, dustbin lorries - they all came to a standstill to join
in the celebrations. With France under high security since the November
2015 terror attacks the fan zone at the town hall was policed by over
1,200 members of the security forces.
Fans, who had
climbed on top of buses gingerly inching their way through the crowds,
were dancing and waving flares and flags, as the bus driver fought a
losing battle to get his passengers to their destination on
time.
"I was 18 years old in 1998, it was one of the most beautiful nights of my life. We'll repeat that this Sunday," said Sebastien.
"This team is fantastic," he said, beaming.
"Boys,
we're world champions" one man in his 30s was heard telling his mates.
"Stop that, you'll bring us bad luck" he was reprimanded before the
group of friends broke out into the chant of the night -- "We're in the
final".
From balconies, families waved the French national flag, children kitted out in Les Bleus shirts waved to the crowd below.
The
Rue de Rivoli, normally choc-a-bloc with Tuesday night traffic, became a
temporary pedestrian zone as crowds made their way along it past the
Louvre to the Champs-Elysees, where 20 years earlier Paris had gathered
to celebrate France's sole World Cup win.
Two decades
on, there was a sense of deja vu as thousands of euphoric fans turned
the City of Lights' most celebrated boulevard into a giant street party.
Up
in the capital's red light district at Pigalle in the 18th
arrondissement, the neon lit-windmill outside the Moulin Rouge cabaret
was shrouded in a haze of smokebombs and flares.
"It's magnificent," beamed Thierry Perier, 45, who was with his eight-year-old daughter.
"We
needed this in France, we deserved it. We had the best players and for
the moral of the French, to win the World Cup would be the best present
ever," he said, his voice hoarse from cheering.
Another
fan, 17-year-old Lea, was not even born when France won their one and
only World Cup on a heady night at the Stade de France in a 3-0 triumph
over Brazil.
Lea told AFP: "It's so beautiful what's happened. We are going to experience our own '98' now!"
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