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French strikes grow

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FRENCH truck drivers and garbage collectors joined nationwide strikes against President Emmanuel Macron’s pension reform plans yesterday as trade unions stepped up their campaign to try to force a policy U-turn.

There was also widespread disruption to train services, fuel deliveries were halted and teachers walked off the job on the sixth day of nationwide protests against Macron’s plans to raise the pension age by two years to 64.

“I don’t want to work until I’m 64 ... we’re fighting not to lose our rights,” 50-year-old truck driver Mickael Lormeau said at a protest march in the western France city of Saint-nazaire, one of more than 300 rallies scheduled across the country.

“People are fed up, they’re exhausted,” 41-year-old Jessica Trocme, a union leader in a Lidl supermarke­t, said in Saint-nazaire.

Across the country, many protest rallies attracted bigger crowds than previous ones organised since midJanuary, including in Marseille, one of France’s biggest cities, authoritie­s and local media said. There was no data yet for the Paris march.

This is a critical time for both sides since the government is hoping the pension changes will be adopted by parliament by the end of the month.

Looking to pile pressure on lawmakers, France’s more hardline unions said there would be rolling strikes this time, which could go on for days, including at oil refineries and railways.

“We will continue until the reform is withdrawn,” the head of Force

Ouvriere (FO) union, Frédéric Souillot, told RTL radio. Macron’s proposal to make people work longer is deeply unpopular among the wider public, opinion polls show.

“This reform is unfair,” said Aurelie Herkous, who works in public finance in Pont Audemer, Normandy. “Macron offers tax gifts to companies.”

France’s leading trade unions have so far acted with rare unity, but the coming days will test their ability to maintain that united front.

Union leaders were to meet to decide on the next steps. Some have already decided on rolling strikes. Eric Sellini, a CGT union representa­tive at Totalenerg­ies, told Reuters a strike currently completely blocking the

Gonfrevill­e oil refinery in Normandy was expected to run until tomorrow and one at the Donges refinery in western France until Friday.

The CFDT, now France’s biggest trade union and generally reformmind­ed, has not committed to the rolling strikes and has said there could be other forms of protest.

While the government will be looking for divisions to emerge between the unions in the hope it weakens the movement, the CGT and FO, which are powerful in the transport and energy sectors, would still be able to bring significan­t disruption.

The government insists its reform plan is essential to ensure the pension system does not go bust.

“I can understand that not many people want to work two more years, but it’s necessary to ensure the viability of the system,” Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne told France 5 TV.

While Macron’s camp does not have an absolute majority in parliament, it can count on the support of at least part of the conservati­ve Les Republicai­ns party. Even so, the legislatio­n is having a bumpy path through parliament and Macron and his government may yet be forced to use special constituti­onal powers to bypass a parliament­ary vote – union leaders have warned him not to.

“Forcing (the bill) through would spark a crisis,” CGT leader Philippe Martinez said.

 ?? | EPA ?? PEOPLE protest against the French government’s planned reform of the pension system, in Marseille, yesterday.
| EPA PEOPLE protest against the French government’s planned reform of the pension system, in Marseille, yesterday.

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