Fuel costs spark riots in France
PARIS— French President Emmanuel Macron is under fire again, this time over rising fuel prices.
On Saturday, some 244,000 protesters, many clad in yellow vests, not only took to the streets but, in many places, literally took the streets, according to the French Interior Ministry. The ministry said a network of drivers blocked roads at some 2,000 locations across the country, generating traffic backups for miles and causing one death.
A 63-year-old protester was killed in the eastern Savoie region when a driver panicked by demonstrators accidentally accelerated into the crowd, French media reported.
The protesters’ chief complaint: the rising cost of diesel fuel. The recent price hike is a direct result of Emmanuel Macron’s commitment to curbing climate change, which included higher carbon taxes for 2018, the first full year of his term. But beyond the diesel issue, many turned out Saturday to voice any number of other frustrations with the so-called president for the rich, who is seen as increasingly removed from ordinary people’s concerns.
Diesel, a fossil fuel, is known for the pollutants it emits into the air. Although it was traditionally taxed at the same rate as petrol, that is no longer the case: taxes on diesel have risen by 6.2 per cent per litre this year, as part of the government’s efforts to protect clean air. The problem is that diesel remains the most common fuel in France, leading many to view recent policies as an attack on working people more than an environmental safeguard.
The stirrings of the “yellow vest” campaign behind Saturday’s protest began this summer, with online petitions urging Macron to reconsider. But the loudest voice was that of Jacline Mouraud, a whitehaired hypnotist and grandmother of three from Brittany who has become the star of the movement.
“You have persecuted drivers since the day you took office. This will continue for how long?” she said in a YouTube video that has garnered millions of views. On Saturday, Mouraud was asked to explain the death of the protester earlier in the day.
“I deplore the death of this woman,” she said, speaking to Europe 1 radio. “But who is responsible for this situation? The French government is responsible for the death of this woman.”