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Paris angers critics with plans to restrict Olympic Games traffic but says residents shouldn't flee

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PARIS (AP) — Stay, enjoy the once-in-a-lifetime show.

That was the message from organizers of the Paris Olympics on Wednesday as they sought to reassure the French capital's residents that security measures and traffic restrictions won't make their lives nightmarish during the July 26-Aug. 11 event and the Paralympic Games that follow.

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But critics, including some in the Senate, were displeased by plans to require motorists to apply online for a QR code to access traffic-restricted zones of Paris during the Games. Senators complained that lawmakers had not been consulted. Nathalie Goulet, a senator from Normandy, likened the proposal to ID papers that France's Nazi occupiers imposed in World War II.

The Senate announced that Paris police chief Laurent Nuñez would appear before senators on Thursday and be asked to explain the security measures around the event.

Nuñez, speaking to journalists, defended the planned QR code as legal and justified. He insisted that traffic restrictions would be kept to the necessary minimum and suggested that he'd been expecting criticism.

Paris residents are upset over plans that call for the download of a QR code in order to access restricted areas of the city during the Olympic Games.

"One can always be the little ugly duckling who sulks in the corner. We know we'll have lots of those," the police chief said.

The traffic restrictions and other security measures detailed Wednesday by Nuñez in a newspaper interview and a subsequent news conference will be concentrated on Olympic competition routes and venues, some of

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