Las Vegas Review-Journal

French police oust student protesters

Strikes shut Eiffel Tower; two-thirds of trains halt

- By Angela Charlton

PARIS — Paris riot police ousted students seeking to occupy Sorbonne university and strikes Friday shut down the Eiffel Tower and twothirds of French trains — all part of a season of simmering national discontent.

Much of the anger centers on President Emmanuel Macron, but he went on national TV on Thursday to declare that strikes and protests won’t prevent him from overhaulin­g France’s economy so it can better compete on the global stage.

Rail workers resumed a strike Friday that will disrupt travel off-andon through June. But the number of striking workers was down from previous actions, and internatio­nal trains largely went through.

National railway authority SNCF said 80 percent of Eurostar trains between Paris and London will run on Saturday, and the Thalys trains between France, Belgium and the Netherland­s are expected to run normally. But only one-third of France’s high speed and regional trains will run.

The Eiffel Tower announced it was closed to the public Friday because of a strike by security personnel. Their demands were not immediatel­y clear.

The Sorbonne announced that its iconic Left Bank site was closed Friday for security reasons after the Thursday night police operation. While about 200 students were evacuated, a few hundred others gathered outside, chanting angrily at police.

The site was a nucleus of student protests 50 years ago in May 1968, when strikes and university occupation­s paralyzed France’s economy in a pivotal moment in modern French history.

 ?? Francois Mori ?? The Associated Press Students and rail workers march during a demonstrat­ion Friday in Paris. Students at campuses around France are protesting admissions reforms that they fear threaten access to public university for all high school graduates.
Francois Mori The Associated Press Students and rail workers march during a demonstrat­ion Friday in Paris. Students at campuses around France are protesting admissions reforms that they fear threaten access to public university for all high school graduates.

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