The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Macron vows to stay course on climate after France protests

-

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday tried to take the heat out of mass anti-government demonstrat­ions, as a spokesman for the movement said there would be another show of strength on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on Saturday.

Macron said he had heard the anger expressed by the protests and would seek to bolster people’s spending power but refused to change course from trying to make France greener.

The 40-year-old centrist acknowledg­ed that many struggling households felt penalised by years of rising fuel taxes, the spark for road blockades and demonstrat­ions over the past 10 days.

Macron offered minor concession­s, saying he would propose a mechanism to adjust the tax increases if prices were also being pushed up by rising oil prices internatio­nally — as they have been for much of this year.

And he called for a three-month national consultati­on to draw up a roadmap for accelerati­ng France’s transition away from fossil fuels, which he insisted would remain his overall objective.

“What I’ve taken from these last few days is that we shouldn’t change course, because it is the right one and necessary,” he told lawmakers at the presidenti­al palace in Paris.

In an hour-long speech, Macron repeated several times that he had understood the anger expressed by hundreds of thousands of people who have taken to the streets wearing high-visibility yellow jackets this month.

He conceded that many French people felt that taxes were ‘imposed from above’ and promised to accelerate the work of the government to lighten the load for working families and cut public spending.

Environmen­t Minister Francois de Rugy later met members of the movement.

After the meeting, one of its spokesmen, Eric Drouet, said protesters would return to the Champs-Elysees on Saturday just as they did last week.

“The French are not at all convinced” by Macron’s announceme­nts, he said at the end of the talks, calling also for a new meeting with ‘the government’s spokespers­on or the prime minister’.

“There will be a gathering like last Saturday on the ChampsElys­ees. The wish of all the yellow vests is to continue every Saturday like that on the Champs-Elysees,” he added. But beyond fuel taxes — set to increase again in January — some of the most frequent complaints from the ‘yellow vests’ is Macron’s perceived elitism and his pro-business policies.

“I have seen, like many French people, the difficulti­es for people who have to drive a lot and have problems making ends meet at the end of the month,” Macron said.

“I believe very profoundly that we can transform this anger into the solution.”

Acknowledg­ing that protesters worry about surviving ‘the end of the month’ in contrast to his government’s desire to stave off ‘the end of the world’, he promised: “We are going to deal with both.”

Last Saturday’s protests saw barricades and tear gas on the Champs-Elysees.

Many participan­ts have called for Macron to reimpose a wealth tax on high earners, repealed after the former investment banker took office last year. — AFP

 ??  ?? Protestors dressed with yellow vests stand in front of fire on a road near the police, on the Indian Ocean island of La Reunion to demonstrat­e against high fuel prices and living costs. — AFP photo
Protestors dressed with yellow vests stand in front of fire on a road near the police, on the Indian Ocean island of La Reunion to demonstrat­e against high fuel prices and living costs. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia