Ottawa Citizen

Police hold ‘anger march’ in Paris

YELLOW VEST FALLOUT

- HENRY SAMUEL

WE’RE HERE TO FIGHT FOR OUR WORKING CONDITIONS.

PARIS • Thousands of French police officers Wednesday staged a “march of anger” in Paris in a protest on a scale not seen in almost 20 years.

Officers are exhausted after months of “yellow vest” violence in the major cities every weekend that saw protesters target officers, who were themselves accused of heavy-handed tactics.

Police unions said morale was at rock bottom and that suicides this year alone were already 10 higher than the annual average of 42. Organizers said 27,000 police of all ranks gathered at Bastille for the first time since 2001, when they protested en masse at the release of an armed robber who had murdered two officers.

Attacks on police rose 15 per cent this year in the wake of the yellow vest revolt.

“Things can’t go on like this,” said David Bars, head of the police chief union SCPN-Unsa.

“We’re here to fight for our working conditions and above all to pay tribute to our colleagues who took their own lives,” said a young officer in the Paris transport police. Officer Cyril Benoit said: “There’s always been pressure on police — but never like this.”

Another officer, Antoine, 40, said: “Television keeps replaying videos of (allegedly brutal) police actions but you don’t see the paving stone that flew overhead seconds before.”

Police protesters claim they have worked 23 million hours in overtime without pay.

Also among the grievances aired by protesting police officers was a plan by French President Emmanuel Macron to reform pensions.

Several profession­s, including public transport workers, doctors, lawyers and pilots have already voiced their discontent over this planned reform, fearing they will lose out.

“It’s unacceptab­le that we work until the age of 65 and run after thieves until we’re 65. All we want is respect, considerat­ion, and that beyond words, we see concrete actions,” said Frederic Lagache, a representa­tive of a police union.

Christophe Castaner, the interior minister, said the police budget was being raised by a billion euros over Macron’s five-year presidency. Macron himself has vowed to recruit an extra 10,000 officers. Under a 1948 rule, police are forbidden to strike.

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