Oman Daily Observer

French crowds march as govt stands firm on reforms

GRIDLOCK: Commuters in Paris and other big cities call for ‘Christmas truce’

-

PARIS: Tens of thousands of protesters hit French streets on Tuesday in a pensions reform standoff that has sparked nearly two weeks of crippling transport strikes, with the government vowing it will not give in to union demands to drop the overhaul.

Teachers, hospital workers and other public employees joined transport workers for the third day of marches since the dispute began on December 5.

More than 200,000 people turned out for dozens of rallies across the country, according to police estimates, as a huge march began at the Place de la Republique in Paris.

The Eiffel Tower was closed because of the protest and police were on high alert — wary of a repeat of earlier marches when shops were vandalised and vehicles set on fire.

The hard-line CGT union said electricit­y workers cut power to some 50,000 homes near Bordeaux and 40,000 in Lyon overnight as part of the protest, warning that bigger cuts could follow.

The government has insisted it will push through a single points-based pension system and end the current patchwork of 42 separate schemes that offer early retirement to many in the public sector. It says the new system will be fairer and more transparen­t, improving pensions for women and low earners in particular.

“My determinat­ion, and that of the government and the majority, is total,” Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told parliament on the eve of new talks with unions.

Critics say the changes could force millions of people to work beyond the official retirement age of 62 — one of the lowest in Europe — by setting a “pivot age” of 64 that would ensure a full pension.

“What scares us about the points system is that we don’t know how much a point is worth,” said Kelly Grossetcur­tet, a 21-year-old student marching in Lyon.

“It seems that it’s a way of separating the good pensioners from the bad ones.” ‘MESS UP CHRISTMAS’

Pressure on President Emmanuel Macron is growing just days before the Christmas break after the top official overseeing the pension negotiatio­ns was forced to resign on Monday after it emerged he had failed to declare income.

Commuters in Paris and other big cities have borne the brunt of the transport stoppages so far but holiday travel plans are now at risk, with just one in four highspeed TGV trains running on Tuesday.

Strike organisers are hoping for a repeat of 1995 when they forced the government to back down on pension reform after three weeks of metro and rail strikes just before Christmas.

 ??  ?? Protesters gather at the Place de la Republique in Paris during fresh demonstrat­ions against a pensions overhaul. — AFP
Protesters gather at the Place de la Republique in Paris during fresh demonstrat­ions against a pensions overhaul. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman