The Jerusalem Post

France police water spray ‘yellow-vest’ protesters

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PARIS (Reuters) – Paris police fired water cannon and tear gas to repel “yellow-vest” demonstrat­ors from around the Arc de Triomphe monument on Saturday in the ninth straight weekend of protests against French President Emmanuel Macron’s economic reforms.

Thousands of protesters also marched noisily but peacefully through the Grands Boulevards shopping area in northern Paris, close to where a major gas explosion in a bakery killed two firefighte­rs and injured nearly 50 people early on Saturday.

Central Paris was in lockdown against another feared eruption of violence by radical elements in the giletsjaun­es (yellow-vest) movement, with bridges across the Seine River closed and official buildings such as parliament and the Elysee presidenti­al palace protected by police barriers.

Groups of protesters also gathered on and around Paris’s famous Champs Élysées Boulevard, the scene of disturbanc­es in recent weeks, many of them calling loudly for Macron to resign.

“Macron, we are going to tear down your place!” one banner read.

Around the 19th-century Arc de Triomphe at the top of the Champs Elysee, riot police unleashed water cannon and tear gas at militant yellow-vest protesters after being pelted with stones and paint, witnesses said.

By mid-afternoon there had been no major clashes with police unlike in previous weeks. In Paris over 50 people were arrested, some for carrying objects that could be used as weapons.

There were also thousands of marchers in the cities of Bordeaux and Toulon in southern France as well as Strasbourg in the East and the central city of Bourges.

Bourges authoritie­s said nearly 5,000 yellow vests stuck to the designated demonstrat­ion area but another 500 had pushed into the city center that was off-limits for demonstrat­ors.

Many businesses in Bourges had boarded themselves up to avoid damage from protesters and authoritie­s had removed street furniture and building site materials that could be used for barricades.

In Strasbourg, up to 2,000 demonstrat­ors gathered in front of the European Parliament building and later marched to the center of the city on the Rhine River border with Germany. Protesters set garbage bins ablaze and police fired a few tear gas grenades, but no serious violence or looting was reported.

More than 80,000 police were on duty for the protests nationwide, including 5,000 in Paris.

The “yellow vests” take their name from the high-visibility jackets they wear at road barricades and on the street. Their rage stems from a squeeze on household incomes and a belief that Macron – a former investment banker regarded as close to big business – is indifferen­t to their hardships.

Macron, often criticized for a monarchica­l manner, is to launch a national debate on January 15 to try to mollify the yellow-vest protesters, whose unrest has shaken his administra­tion.

The debate, to be held on the Internet and in town halls, will focus on four themes: taxes, green energy, institutio­nal reform and citizenshi­p. But aides to Macron have said changing the course of Macron’s reforms aimed at liberalizi­ng the economy will be off limits.

 ?? (Christian Hartmann/Reuters) ?? A ‘YELLOW-VEST’ protester faces off against French police yesterday near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.
(Christian Hartmann/Reuters) A ‘YELLOW-VEST’ protester faces off against French police yesterday near the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

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