Belfast Telegraph

Protester dies and hundreds injured as citizens rise up over fuelprices­inFrance

- BY ELAINE GANLEY

ONE protester has been killed and almost 230 other people were injured — eight seriously — at roadblocks set up around villages, towns and cities across France as citizens angry with rising fuel taxes rose up in a grassroots movement, posing a new challenge to beleaguere­d President Emmanuel Macron.

Police lobbed tear gas canisters at demonstrat­ors on the famed Champs-Elysees Avenue in Paris as groups of “yellow jackets”, as the protesters call themselves, tried to make their way to the presidenti­al Elysee Palace.

Hundreds of protesters later entered the bottom of the street dotted with luxury shops where the palace is located — and where Mr Macron lives — before being pushed back by security forces with shields.

Police also cleared out the huge traffic circle around the Arc de Triomphe, paralysed for hours by protesters.

French Interior Ministry officials counted nearly 283,000 protesters, mostly peaceful, throughout the day at more than 2,000 sites, some starting bonfires or flying balloons.

However, some demonstrat­ions turned violent. In Troyes, south-east of Paris, about 100 people invaded the prefecture, the local representa­tion of the state, damaging the interior.

In Quimper, Brittany, security forces used water cannon to disperse hostile protesters.

One protester, a 63-year-old woman, died when a driver caught in traffic accelerate­d in a panic at Pont-de-Beauvoisin, near Chambery in eastern France, said to local officials.

A confrontat­ion with protesters “got heated up for no reason” and the driver accelerate­d her minivan after “people started rattling her car”, a witness told BFMTV. He said the woman told them she was taking her daughter to a doctor. An investigat­ion into the death is under way.

Eight of the 227 injured are in serious condition, including Top: protesters blocking the traffic on the Champs Elysees in Paris to protest against fuel taxes and (above) President Emmanuel Macron a police officer and a firefighte­r who intervened when protesters attacked a closed service station.

A total of 117 people were arrested, with 73 of them held for questionin­g.

The protesters had pledged to target tollbooths, roundabout­s and other strategic traffic sites. They called themselves “yellow jackets” because most were wearing the fluorescen­t yellow vests that must be kept in vehicles of all French drivers in case of car trouble. The nationwide protest was unusual because it arose from within the citizenry, backed neither by unions nor politician­s, although some took part in a clear bid for supporters.

It was unclear if the movement, without a leader, would survive, and what problems it might pose for Mr Macron.

The planned increase in fuel taxes, notably for diesel, spoke to those who feel the president has asked ordinary citizens to make the largest efforts in his bid to transform France. Those French who have a hard time getting by often rely on cheaper diesel fuel.

Mr Macron wants to close the gap between the price of diesel fuel and petrol in a strategy to wean France off fossil fuels.

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