The Denver Post

More than 1M march over pensions

- By Elaine Ganley, Sylvie Corbet and Nicolas Garriga

More than a million demonstrat­ors marched in cities and towns across France on Tuesday, in a new round of protests and strikes against the government’s plan to raise the retirement age to 64. Unions called for more protests this weekend while warning that the situation could become “explosive.”

The government “must withdraw its project now,” unions demanded after an evening meeting to decide their course of action.

They had hoped Tuesday’s show of force would undermine President Emmanuel Macron’s showcase draft legislatio­n. The bill was under debate in the Senate this week.

Garbage collectors, utility workers, train drivers and others walked off the job across the country to show their anger at the reform.

“The silence of the president constitute­s a grave democratic problem that inevitably leads to a situation that could become explosive,” unions said in a joint statement.

They asked for an urgent meeting with authoritie­s while calling on citizens to “continue and amplify” the protests and join new marches Saturday.

Demonstrat­ors took to the streets in Paris, Marseille, Nice and other cities. Minor clashes with police broke out in Nantes, Rennes and Lyon. In Paris, police used tear gas to stop black-clad protesters from carrying out violent attacks on banks and shops and to disperse them long after the protest march ended.

Paris Police Chief Laurent Nunez said that 43 people were detained in a march that drew 81,000. The Interior Ministry said that nearly 1.3 million demonstrat­ed around France. The CGT union put the number of Paris protesters at 700,000 and estimated 3.5 million around the country.

In the French capital, workers, families and activists gathered in a joyful atmosphere, chanting slogans.

Opinion polls suggest that most French voters oppose the bill.

“To see so many people today gives me hope,” said 38-year-old Sarah Durieux. The activist said the protests have extended beyond their initial agenda, attracting climate activists, feminists and students. “The movement has spread because to defend workers’ rights means defending a social model based on solidarity,” she said.

Unions threatened to freeze up the French economy with work stoppages across multiple sectors, most visibly an open-ended strike at the SNCF national rail authority.

Some unions have called for open- ended strikes in sectors from refineries and oil depots to electricit­y and gas facilities.

All oil shipments in the country were halted Tuesday amid strikes at the refineries of Totalenerg­ies, Esso-exxonmobil and Petroineos groups, according to the CGT.

Truckers sporadical­ly blocked major highways in go-slow actions near several cities.

In Paris, garbage collectors started an open-ended strike and on Tuesday morning blocked access to the incinerati­on plant at Ivry-sur-Seine, south of the capital, Europe’s biggest such facility.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States