The French government is banning smoking in all places where children spend time, including beaches, parks and outside schools.

It will come into force on July and be enforced by police, reports the BBC.

Health and Family Minister Catherine Vautrin told French media the aim was to rid cigarettes from all places frequented by children.

Smoking will be banned at French beaches and other public places later this year. (Photo: Penny Stephens/The Age) (Nine)

She said that “the freedom to smoke must end where the freedom of children to breathe fresh air begins”.

Smokers who breach the rules will be fined €135 ($237). While the ban will be enforced by regular police, Vautrin said she hoped people would show “self-regulation” .

The outdoor terraces of cafes and bars would be exempt from the new rules.

Electronic cigarettes also do not fall under the ban, but the government says it is planning limits on the amounts of nicotine they contain.

Data from the French Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction shows 23 per cent of France’s population smokes daily – the lowest percentage ever recorded.

Blanket smoking bans for beaches, parks and other public places were supposed to start last year, but the required legislation was never brought in.

But hundreds of beaches have prohibited smoking for several years after about 1500 local governments introduced their own bans.

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