French senators voted and approved the law on Thursday. Joël Giraud, the Minister for Rural Affairs, said that he celebrated the new law that aims to "define and protect the sensory heritage of the French countryside."
France has always experienced several social conflicts between long-term residents of countryside communities and new arrivals. All this happened after an incident went viral in 2019. A rooster named Maurice was put on trial in July 2019 after people complained about early morning crowing.
But a court in Rochefort rejected the complaints and instead ordered neighbors to pay €1,000 (around $1,200) in damages. The case was symbolic of increasing divisions between rural and city-dwellers in France.
At the time of trial, Corinne Fesseau, the owner of Maurice said, "He is a rooster. Roosters have the desire to sing. That is the countryside. We must protect the countryside".