The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Strikes, protests as French unions seek momentum to halt pension reform

- REUTERS

PARIS — French trade unions crippled transport, shut schools and brought hundreds of thousands of demonstrat­ors into the streets on Tuesday in a redoubled effort to force President Emmanuel Macron to ditch a planned pension reform by Christmas.

Unions had called the mobilizati­on hoping to regain momentum after one of the biggest waves of strikes and protests in decades had started to tail off in recent days. While it was too early to say whether they would match the 800,000 demonstrat­ors brought into the streets two weeks ago, the strike appeared to have been observed on a similar scale.

Police fired tear gas and stun grenades at demonstrat­ors in central Paris’s Place de la Nation. Protesters dressed in black, some with scarves and masks, overturned bins, tried to smash advertisin­g hoardings and hurled projectile­s at police lines. Paris police said the clashes involved “black block” anarchists, a small minority of the otherwise peaceful protesters.

In Paris, shops were shuttered along the protest route. Riot police lined both sides of the central Boulevard Beaumarcha­is and had erected a barricades across the traffic circle in Bastille Square. A water cannon truck was parked nearby.

“We want social justice,” said Veronique Ragot, 55, a striking sub-editor at a publishing house. “We’ve seen our social benefits melt in the sun, and this is the last straw.”

A broadcaste­r showed clouds of what its reporter described as tear gas fired on protesters in the western city of Nantes.

Former investment banker Macron aims to streamline the Byzantine state pension system and prod people to work until 64, instead of the average retirement age now of 62.

The strike forced most long distance trains, commuter trains and Paris metro lines to shut. Even the Eiffel Tower was closed. Many state schools were shut or had reduced lessons. Grid operator RTE blamed the strike for power outages in Lyon.

In the morning, roads were thick with pedestrian­s, bicycles and electric scooters as people headed to work.

Official figures suggested the number of railway workers participat­ing in the strike had gone up, although the number of teachers had gone down.

The unions and Macron are each hoping to push the other to back down before Christmas, with the prospect that strikes over the holiday would alienate an increasing­ly frustrated public.

PRIVILEGES

“Democratic and union opposition to our project is perfectly legitimate. But we have stated clearly what our project was, and my government is totally determined to reform the pensions system and to balance the pension system’s budget,” Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told parliament.

 ?? REUTERS ?? French labour union members and workers on strike attend a demonstrat­ion in Paris as France faces its 13th day of consecutiv­e strikes against French government’s pensions reform plans on Tuesday.
REUTERS French labour union members and workers on strike attend a demonstrat­ion in Paris as France faces its 13th day of consecutiv­e strikes against French government’s pensions reform plans on Tuesday.

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