Western Mail

King’s state visit delayed amid French disruption

- ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTERS newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

FRENCH President Emmanuel Macron says “common sense and friendship” led to the cancellati­on of King Charles III’s upcoming visit due to the anti-government protests in France.

Speaking at a press conference after a summit in Brussels, Mr Macron said: “We would not be serious... to make a state visit in the middle of protests.”

He said proceeding with Sunday’s visit “would have prompted incidents” that would have been “detestable”.

He said Charles’s visit will likely be reschedule­d for the beginning of summer.

Mr Macron condemned the violent behaviour that has taken place at some of the protests against his plan to raise France’s retirement age from 62 to 64, saying “violence has no place in a democracy”.

Although no major protests were planned for yesterday, train traffic was slowed, rows of lorries blocked access to Marseille’s port for several hours and debris still littered the streets of Paris following the previous day’s mass demonstrat­ions.

More than 450 protesters were arrested in Paris and beyond as some 300 demonstrat­ions on Thursday drew more than a million people nationwide.

Polls show that most French people oppose having to work two more years before retiring, which Mr Macron says is necessary to keep the pension system afloat.

Interior minister Gerald Darmanin said 441 police officers and gendarmes were hurt as violence marred some marches.

He said 1,000 rubbish bins were set on fire in the French capital; overflowin­g garbage cans have become a symbol of the protests during a weeks-long strike by sanitation workers.

Charles and Queen Consort Camilla planned to visit both France and Germany during the King’s first trip abroad as Britain’s monarch.

He still plans to go to Germany but British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s office said another date will be found for the French leg.

“The King and Queen Consort’s state visit to France has been postponed,” Mr Sunak’s Downing Street office said.

“This decision was taken with the consent of all parties after the president of France asked the British government to postpone the visit.”

Charles was scheduled to visit the city of Bordeaux on the second day of his trip to France.

The heavy wooden door of the elegant Bordeaux City Hall was destroyed by fire on Thursday night by people taking part in an unauthoris­ed demonstrat­ion.

Mayor Pierre Hurmic said he had “difficulty understand­ing the interest of such acts of vandalism”.

Before the King’s visit was postponed, Mr Hurmic said he hoped it would not get cancelled.

“I hope that we do not give this gift to the thugs,” he said.

Fires in Paris, which were intentiona­lly lit in narrow or inaccessib­le alleys on Thursday night, alarmed both city officials and residents.

Firefighte­rs and residents worked together to tame the flames that rose to the second storey of an apartment building in the chic Palais Royal area.

Oil refineries have been another protest target.

France’s Civil Aviation Authority has requested the cancellati­on of one-third of flights at Paris’ second airport, Orly, on Sunday, and 20% on Monday.

Unions have called for new protests and strikes on Tuesday.

 ?? DANIEL COLE ?? > Riot police watch smoke rising from burning tyres at the entrance of a blocked oil depot in Fos-sur-Mer, southern France, yesterday amid continuing protests
DANIEL COLE > Riot police watch smoke rising from burning tyres at the entrance of a blocked oil depot in Fos-sur-Mer, southern France, yesterday amid continuing protests

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