The Borneo Post (Sabah)

French government scraps fuel price hikes

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PARIS: The French government, under pressure from weeks of ‘yellow vest’ protests over rising living costs, scrapped all planned fuel tax hikes for 2019 and appealed for calm.

An increase scheduled for Jan 1, was ‘scrapped for the year 2019’ in its entirety, Environmen­t Minister Francois de Rugy announced on BFM TV, in an about-turn for the government.

The presidency, meanwhile, warned of possible violence during a new round of protests planned for Saturday in Paris and elsewhere in the country.

“We have reasons to fear major violence,” a source in the Elysee Palace told AFP amid calls for fresh mobilisati­on of the ‘yellow vests’ movement already linked to four deaths and hundreds of injuries in often violent demonstrat­ions.

The protests began on Nov 17 to oppose rising fuel taxes, but have ballooned into a broad challenge to French President Emmanuel Macron’s perceived pro-business agenda and complaints that he is out of touch with the struggles of ordinary people.

Demonstrat­ors have blocked roads nationwide, playing havoc with traffic in the busy run-up to Christmas.

Last Saturday, rioters ran amok in the capital, torching some 200 cars, smashing shop windows, and vandalisin­g the Arc de Triomphe, an iconic national monument.

Macron and his government appealed for calm Wednesday, and signalled they were ready to make further concession­s to avoid more violence.

“The moment that we are living through is not about political opposition, it’s about the republic,” government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux said after a cabinet meeting where he said Macron urged decision-makers to issue “a clear and explicit call to calm.”

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told parliament: “What is at stake is the security of French people and our institutio­ns. I’m calling for responsibi­lity.”

However, far-right leader Marine Le Pen and hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon have been vocal in backing the demonstrat­ors’ demands.

Protests continued Wednesday, with petrol depots, service stations, and shopping centres among the targets of the ‘yellow vests’ or ‘gilets jaunes’ – so named for the high-visibility road safety jackets they wear.

Macron, whose approval ratings are down to just 23 per cent, is yet to comment publicly since returning to France from a G20 summit in Argentina on Sunday morning.

But his office said he told ministers he would stick to his decision to cut a ‘fortune tax’ on high-earners – a move which has infuriated many protesters.

The one-year moratorium on fuel tax rises was announced the day after Philippe, in the first major retreat of Macron’s presidency, said the January 1 fuel tax rise would be postponed for six months.

On Wednesday, De Rugy said the period was extended to assuage fears that the unpopular increase would simply be reintroduc­ed once the protests stop.

In a battery of announceme­nts targeting low-income families, Philippe also froze increases in regulated electricit­y and gas prices, and new vehicle norms that would have hit users of old, polluting diesel cars.

Macron had made cutting wealth taxes a key campaign pledge ahead of his election in May 2017, arguing such levies discourage investment and drive away entreprene­urs. But the policy, along with comments deemed insensitiv­e to the working class, has prompted many of the ex-banker’s critics to label him a ‘president of the rich’.

The ‘yellow vests’ are largely made up of modest earners from rural and small-town France.

Experts say the government may have reacted too late to the street protests – a regular feature of French political life which have repeatedly forced previous presidents into U-turns.

“When you leave things to fester too long, it costs more,” JeanFranco­is Amadieu, a sociologis­t at Paris 1 University, told AFP.

Nine government ministers were deployed to television and radio studios Wednesday to explain the administra­tion’s stance. — AFP

 ??  ?? A French riot policeman stands next to a burning car as youth and high school students protest against the French government’s reform plan, in Nantes. — Reuters photo
A French riot policeman stands next to a burning car as youth and high school students protest against the French government’s reform plan, in Nantes. — Reuters photo

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