Calgary Herald

French bill targets ‘yellow vest’ protesters

- RICHARD LOUGH

PARIS • French lawmakers have backed a bill banning protesters from hiding their faces during demonstrat­ions, reinforcin­g President Emmanuel Macron’s efforts to push back against violent members of the “yellow vest” movement.

The bill, which is expected to secure approval next week, also grants police greater powers to extract potential trouble-makers from demonstrat­ions.

Addressing the National Assembly, Interior Minister Christophe Castaner urged members to “stop the brutes ... (who listen) only to their hunger for chaos.”

Opponents of the “anti-casseurs” (anti-hooligan) bill accused the government of impinging on civil liberties, with the debate exposing divisions within Macron’s party, which has a comfortabl­e majority.

The tactics used by police around the country have come under scrutiny, in particular the firing of “flash ball” riot guns, which have caused serious injuries, including at least one person blinded in one eye.

“We’re not restrictin­g freedoms, we’re ensuring that freedoms can be guaranteed,” Aurore Berger, a spokeswoma­n for Macron’s La Republique En Marche party told BFM TV on Thursday, hours after the overnight vote.

“We’re not talking about any French citizen chosen at random, we’re talking about those who have hurt others, those who want to kill and destroy property.”

By forbidding protesters from hiding their faces, the legislatio­n aims to make it

WE’RE TALKING ABOUT THOSE WHO HAVE HURT OTHERS, THOSE WHO WANT TO KILL AND DESTROY PROPERTY.

easier to use facial recognitio­n technology to snare rioters. Anyone who masks their face could face a year in prison and a 15,000 euro fine. Critics say it will be impossible to enforce.

The “yellow vest” movement erupted in November as a grassroots protest against fuel taxes but has morphed into a broader revolt against inequality and Macron’s presidency. It takes its name from the fluorescen­t vests motorists in France carry in their cars.

Rioters ran amok in Paris during the early protests, torching cars, smashing luxury boutiques and defacing the Arc de Triomphe. It was among the worst violence the capital has experience­d since a 1968 student uprising.

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