The Hamilton Spectator

France’s young people fight higher retirement age

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PARIS Young people in France — including some who haven’t even entered the job market yet — protested Thursday against the government’s push to raise the retirement age.

Students blocked access to some universiti­es and high schools, and several hundred students led a protest in Paris as part of nationwide strikes and demonstrat­ions against the pension bill under debate in parliament. The protest briefly turned violent as a group of youths broke away, vandalized bus stops and set a car on fire.

The energy branch of France’s prominent union, CGT, on Thursday cut power to the large sports complex in the northern suburb of Paris, including the Stade de France and several constructi­on sites of the infrastruc­ture for the 2024 Olympics.

For a generation already worried about inflation, uncertain job prospects and climate change, the retirement bill is stirring up broader questions about the value of work.

“I don’t want to work all my life and be exhausted at the end,” said Djana Farhaig, a 15-year-old who blocked her Paris high school with other students during a protest action last month. “It is important for us to show that the youth is engaged for its future.”

People in their teens and early 20s have taken part in protests against the retirement reform since the movement kicked off in January, but student groups and unions are seeking to call attention to young people’s concerns Thursday.

President Emmanuel Macron wants to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 and make other changes he says are needed to keep the public pension system financiall­y stable as the population ages. Opponents argue that wealthy taxpayers or companies should pitch in more to finance the system instead.

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