The Columbus Dispatch

Protest grows destructiv­e

Rioting engulfs Paris as anger mounts over high French taxes

- By Elaine Ganley and John Leicester

PARIS — The rumble of armored police trucks and the hiss of tear gas filled central Paris on Saturday, as French riot police fought to contain thousands of yellow-vested protesters venting their anger against the government in a movement that has grown more violent by the week.

A ring of steel surrounded the president's Elysee Palace — a key destinatio­n for the protesters — as police stationed trucks and reinforced metal barriers throughout the neighborho­od.

Stores along the elegant Champs-Elysees and Montaigne avenues boarded up their windows as if bracing for a hurricane but the storm struck anyway Saturday, this time at the height of the holiday shopping season. Protesters ripped off the plywood protecting the windows and threw flares and other projectile­s. French riot police repeatedly repelled them with tear gas and water cannon.

Saturday's yellow vest crowd was overwhelmi­ngly male, a mix of those bringing their financial grievances to Paris — the center of France's government, economy and culture — along with groups of experience­d vandals who tore through some of the city's wealthiest neighborho­ods, smashing and burning.

Police and protesters also clashed in other French cities, notably Marseille, Toulouse and Bordeaux, and in neighborin­g Belgium. Some protesters took aim

at the French border with Italy, creating a huge traffic backup near the town of Ventimigli­a.

The French government’s plan was to prevent a repeat of the Dec. 2 rioting that damaged the Arc de Triomphe, devastated central Paris and tarnished the country’s global image. It did not succeed.

Although Saturday’s protest in the French capital started out quietly, tear gas choked the ChampsElys­ees by early evening.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said 135 people had been injured and 974 taken into custody around the nation. Paris police counted 71 injured in the capital, seven of them police officers.

An estimated 125,000 people demonstrat­ed across France while 10,000 took to the streets of Paris, double the number in the capital last week, the interior minister said. Toughening security tactics, French authoritie­s deployed 8,000 security officers in the capital alone, among the 89,000 who fanned out around the country.

A Starbucks near the Champs-Elysees was

smashed wide open and people were seen stepping over broken glass and serving themselves beverages. The window of a nearby bank was smashed in with a wroughtiro­n decoration used to encircle city tree trunks.

All of the city’s top tourist attraction­s — including the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre museum — shut down for the day, fearing the kind of damage wreaked a week ago. Christmas markets and soccer matches were cancelled. Subway stations in the city center closed and the U.S. embassy warned citizens to avoid all protest areas.

Amid the melee, President Emmanuel Macron remained invisible and silent, as he has for the four weeks of a movement that started as a protest against a gas tax hike and metamorpho­sed into a rebellion against high taxes and eroding living standards.

The mayor of the city of Saint-Etienne, a town in southeast France hit by violence Saturday, castigated Macron for failing to speak out, saying it “feeds the resentment.”

“This silence becomes contempt for the nation,” the mayor, Gael Perdriau, of the opposition conservati­ve party, said on BFMTV. “He has a direct responsibi­lity in what is happening. He can’t remain closed up in the Elysee.”

 ?? [CLAUDE PARIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? People run from a burning car during clashes with police Saturday in Marseille southern France. What began as resistance to a rise in taxes for diesel and gasoline has quickly expanded to encompass frustratio­n at stagnant income and the growing cost of living.
[CLAUDE PARIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] People run from a burning car during clashes with police Saturday in Marseille southern France. What began as resistance to a rise in taxes for diesel and gasoline has quickly expanded to encompass frustratio­n at stagnant income and the growing cost of living.

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