The Borneo Post

France’s ‘yellow vests’ target borders ahead of Christmas

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PARIS: Three days from Christmas, fewer French ‘yellow vests’ turned out for a sixth Saturday of protests, targeting border points as a fatal road accident brought the death toll to 10 since the movement began last month.

A total of 38,600 people took part in protests across the country, well down from the 66,000 by the same time the previous Saturday, the interior ministry said. There were 220 people detained nationwide, 81 of whom were taken into police custody, it added.

The number of demonstrat­ors has been trending downwards since 282,000 people turned out for the first Saturday protest against planned fuel tax hikes on Nov 17.

The movement, characteri­sed by the high-visibility yellow vests worn by the protesters, then morphed into a widespread demonstrat­ion against Macron’s policies and style of governing.

Health minister Agnes Buzyn told Le Journal du Dimanche (The Sunday Newspaper) Macron’s government was ‘in step with the demands of the yellow vests’ as she called for ‘a more constructi­ve dialogue’.

Prime minister Edouard Philippe told the same newspaper his relationsh­ip with Macron has only ‘intensifie­d’ during the crisis, rather than become strained, as has been reported.

“We talk a lot. We tell each other things,” he said.

Saturday’s numbers were a sharp drop from last week, when Macron, a pro-business centrist, gave in to some of the movement’s demands.

Paris police said 142 people were detained and 19 taken into police custody in the French capital, including a ‘ yellow vest’ leader, Eric Drouet.

Government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux tweeted that behind the violence was ‘a single face, cowardly, racist, antiSemiti­c, putschist’.

He denounced the decapitati­on of an effigy of Macron, violent attacks on police after an officer’s motorcycle was taken by protesters on the ChampsElys­ee, and that outside the Sacre Coeur church some had sung a song by comedian and political activist Dieudonne, who has been convicted for anti- Semitic insults.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner meanwhile said there had been a ‘ real slowdown’, but some people ‘continue to come and protest, driven by hatred of institutio­ns’.

Near the border between France and Spain hundreds of protesters disrupted traffic as they gathered around an autoroute toll booth.

Police fired tear gas to disperse the ‘ yellow vests’ who retreated to a bridge, an AFP photograph­er at the scene said.

France borders the Catalan region of Spain, and the protesters were joined by dozens of Catalan pro-independen­ce activists, also wearing yellow vests.

Even though their goals are different, “this demonstrat­ion at the Boulou (toll booth) is symbolic, it shows the solidarity between the Spanish Catalans and the French,” said Marcel, a 49-year- old winegrower.

Two journalist­s covering the Boulou rally for France 2 television said they were ‘ violently’ attacked by the protesters.

Editor Anne Domy told AFP that she and her colleague Audrey Guiraud were ‘ targeted, chased and beaten by a crowd of protesters that completely surrounded us’.

One ‘ yellow vest’ protester helped the two journalist­s escape in a ‘hail of insults’, she said.

The media and journalist­s have been frequent targets of the ‘yellow vest’ movement’s ire.

Roadblocks were also reported near the border with Italy and at a bridge in Strasbourg near the German border. — AFP

 ??  ?? Protesters wearing yellow vests clash with police during a demonstrat­ion in Nantes, France. — Reuters photo
Protesters wearing yellow vests clash with police during a demonstrat­ion in Nantes, France. — Reuters photo

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