Kuwait Times

‘We’re not dead’: Yellow vests seek second wind

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The only traces of the six-month battle waged at the Montabon roundabout in northwest France are the French flag, a luminous yellow vest hoisted on a pole high above the ground, and a few empty food cans rusting in the mud. This windswept junction in the rural Sarthe region was the local rallying point in the nationwide campaign against fuel taxes, which began in November 2018 and quickly ballooned into a full-scale revolt.

In an orchard next to the road, a group of struggling workers, pensioners, job seekers, drifters and dreamers erected a wooden shelter. There, they gathered each day to share a meal and strategize, swapping stories of hardship in an area squeezed by factory closures. They celebrated Christmas, New Year and wedding anniversar­ies together, creating one of the most enduring of the hundreds of roadside camps set up by the yellow vests to protest policies seen as skewed toward well-off city-dwellers. “It was like Noah’s ark,” said David Bruzzi, a 49-year-old mechanic who was one of the camp’s leaders. “It wasn’t just about beating up on (President Emmanuel) Macron,” Bruzzi told AFP during a weekly gathering with a handful of other roundabout “veterans” in a shed on the fruit farm that hosted the Montabon camp. “It was about looking after people in the area and filling shopping bags” for hard-up protesters, he said.

‘We are here’

This weekend, thousands of yellow vests will return to the roadside to mark the first anniversar­y of a rebellion which badly rattled the government, forcing Macron to revise his ambitious reform agenda. Others will travel to Paris, Bordeaux and other big cities to take part in the 52nd straight week of street protests, several of which ended in scenes of looting and arson that made headlines worldwide.

Whether the anniversar­y can breathe new life into a movement whose turnout has shrunk from 282,000 protesters on November 17, 2018, to just a few thousand nationwide on recent Saturdays, remains to be seen. For David’s wife Vanina, a 44-year-old service station employee who spent six months at the barricades, the anniversar­y is the chance to say “We are here, we are not dead.”

Around the world, participan­ts in leaderless revolts from Hong Kong to Chile have cited the yellow vests as a source of inspiratio­n. But in France, the movement’s gains are widely questioned by its own rank-and-file. Most of them dismiss the Ä10-billion ($11 billion) package of measures for the working poor and pensioners announced by Macron late last year as “peanuts”.

Sitting at a bench in a shed stacked with crates of apples, Vanina ventures that the yellow vests’ biggest achievemen­t was to spur other disgruntle­d groups, such as teachers and hospital workers, to take their grievances to the streets. “We can always say that if we hadn’t done it, things would be worse,” said Jean-Jacques Brossay, a grizzled 63-year-old pensioner.

Evolution or revolution?

Not everyone is convinced that history will be kind to the yellow vests. Marco Beaulaton, a retired technician who took part in a 10-day blockade of a petrol refinery in the city of Le Mans, 45 kilometres north of Montabon, is among the skeptics. Like David Bruzzi and the Montabon roundabout, 61-year-old Beaulaton remembers the blockade as an “unforgetta­ble moment of solidarity and sharing”, with birthdays celebrated “around a bonfire of burning pallets”.

But as the days passed, the presence of far-left and farright elements spoiling for a fight with the police grew, alienating many others. Beaulaton, who pleaded for “Mandela and Gandhi-style” pacifism, is convinced that the movement shot itself in the foot by refusing to condemn the violence of a radical minority. “What people want is evolution, not revolution,” he argued. “The French already had their revolution and paid the price in blood.”

Making politician­s listen

One of those on the receiving end of the protesters’ anger was Damien Pichereau, a fresh-faced local man elected to parliament on Macron’s centrist ticket in 2017. A year earlier, newcomers like 31-year-old Pichereau, who grew up in a Sarthe village of 250 people, were being hailed as a breath of fresh air in a jaded political landscape. But for the yellow vests, Macron’s army of young devotees were objects of contempt. Pichereau recalls one demonstrat­or telling him “You don’t know how much I’d like to put a bullet in you”. In February, his constituen­cy office was smashed by hooded demonstrat­ors during a yellow vest protest. And yet like Macron, who told Time magazine in September that the yellow vests had been “good for me”, Pichereau said he believed the movement was a force for positive change. — AFP

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