New Straits Times

French PM confirms fuel tax suspension­s

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PARIS: French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced yesterday new concession­s to “yellow vest” protesters, including the suspension for six months of planned tax increases raising the price of fuel.

“No tax merits putting the unity of the nation in danger,” Philippe said in a televised address, adding that the anger on the streets “originates from a profound injustice: of not being able to live with dignity from one’s work”.

He also announced that increases in the cost of gas and electricit­y, also set to take effect from next year, would be suspended for three months during the winter months.

Philippe added that a tightening of the technical assessment for cars, which was set to penalise heavily polluting older vehicles, would also be suspended for six months.

The measures are an attempt to take the heat out of anti-government protests by low-income people in small-town and rural France who have blocked roads and demonstrat­ed for more than a fortnight.

Protests in Paris on Saturday degenerate­d into some of the worst violence in years in the capital, which saw more than 200 vehicles torched and the Arc de Triomphe vandalised.

Philippe said the protesters and the government shared the same objective — “that work pays” — and acknowledg­ed that France had some of the highest taxes in Europe.

“If taxes fall, public spending must fall,” he said.

 ??  ?? Edouard Philippe
Edouard Philippe

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