The Philippine Star

French police prepare for 5th wave of protests

-

PARIS (Reuters) — France will deploy tens of thousands of police nationwide and around 8,000 in Paris on Saturday to handle a fifth weekend of “yellow vest” protests, although the movement appears to be losing steam after concession­s by French President Emmanuel Macron.

The chief of police in Paris said concerns remained about violent groups infiltrati­ng the protests. Anti-riot officers will protect landmarks such as the Arc de Triomphe and prevent people getting close to the presidenti­al palace.

“We need to be prepared for worst-case scenarios,” police chief Michel Delpuech told

RTL radio. He expected businesses in the capital to be less affected this weekend after heavy disruption over the past three weeks when major stores shut, hotels suffered cancellati­ons and tourists stayed away during the usually busy run-up to Christmas.

Nicknamed “Acte V” of the protests, the yellow vest demonstrat­ors will take to the streets this weekend as France recovers from an unrelated attack on a Christmas market in the eastern city of Strasbourg on Tuesday, when a gunman shot and killed three people and wounded several others.

Hundreds of police officers were redeployed to Strasbourg to search for the gunman, who was shot dead in an exchange of fire on Thursday evening.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said it was time for the yellow vests to scale down their protests and accept they had achieved their aims. Police officers also deserved a break, he added.

“I’d rather have the police force doing their real job, chasing criminals and combating the terrorism threat, instead of securing roundabout­s where a few thousand people keep a lot of police busy,” he said.

Attraction­s such as the Louvre museum and Opera Garnier will be open this week, as will luxury department stores like Galeries Lafayette and Printemps. Last Saturday, they were closed as thousands of sometimes violent protesters tore through the city. The previous weekend the Arc de Triomphe was vandalized, cars were overturned and torched and businesses smashed up.

The protests have taken a toll on the economy, with output in the last quarter of the year set to be half initial projection­s, while Macron’s concession­s are likely to push the budget deficit above an EU agreed limit.

The yellow vest movement, which began as a protest against fuel taxes and then grew into an anti-Macron alliance, appears to have calmed since the president announced a series of measures to help the working poor.

However, many people wearing the highvisibi­lity motorists’ safety jackets which are the symbol of the protests were manning barricades outside cities on Friday.

After heavy criticism for not being seen to respond to the protesters’ complaints, Macron made a TV address this week during which he said he understood their concerns and acknowledg­ed the need for a different approach.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines