French protesters and police clash in marches
against pension changes
Police use teargas and water cannon against hooded
protesters on the margins in some cities
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
@achrisafis
Tue 28 Mar
2023 18.18 BST
Protesters
and police clashed on the edges of street demonstrations in France on Tuesday
as hundreds of thousands of people took part in marches against Emmanuel
Macron’s use of constitutional executive powers to push through an unpopular
rise in the pension age to 64.
While
demonstrations in Paris and Nantes were peaceful, with the majority of demonstrators
chanting and calling for the pension changes to be scrapped, on the margins in
some cities, men in masks or hoods clashed with police.
In Paris,
police fired teargas and launched a charge after some people at the head of the
protest, dressed in black with their faces covered, raided and looted a
supermarket and then started a fire as the march approached Place de la Nation
in the east of the city. At least 22 people were arrested in the capital by the
afternoon, Paris police said.
In the
western city of Nantes, protesters threw projectiles at security forces who
responded withtear gas, AFP reported. A bank branch was set on fire and rubbish
bins were set alight near a court building. Police in Lyon in southeastern
France used water cannon. In Lille, police used teargas after bus stops were
smashed.
In Bordeaux
some hooded people lit fires and projectiles were thrown. In Toulouse, police
used water cannon.
Turnout at
the street protests across France appeared to be slightly lower than the last
day of strikes and protests last Thursday. The interior ministry said 740,000
people took part in protests across France.
Nearly two
weeks after the government pushed the new pensions law through using a special
provision that bypassed a parliament vote, unions have vowed to continue mass
protests to get the government to back down. Macron refuses to abandon the
increase in the pension age, which was a central part of his manifesto before
he was elected to a second term last year.
Strikes
affected transport, the energy sector, schools and civil aviation on Tuesday.
About 15% of service stations in France are short of petrol because of refinery
strikes. Protesters in Nantes, western France, blocked access roads to the
city,creating congestion early in the day. The FIDL high school union said 500
high schools had been barricaded and closed across the country. Dozens of
university buildings were also barricaded and closed. The Eiffel tower closed
because staff were striking.
Rubbish
collectors in Paris are to suspend a three-week strike that has seen thousands
of tonnes of garbage accumulate across half of the city, the CGT union said.
But it said this was to allow coordination with workers “so we can go on strike
again even more strongly”.
At the
Paris march, Yves, a former teacher and factory worker, who retired at 59,
said: “People are demonstrating on the street because citizens aren’t being
listened to. We’re afraid of being teargassed but the police should be
protecting us.”
“The social
state and the social safety net is disappearing,” said Françoise, a social
worker, who was due to retire in three months at 63.
Inès, 25,
from Seine Saint Denis, who had worked as a supermarket cashier and in
fast-food chains, said: “This is about workers on the streets fighting for
their rights.”
Bertrand, a
youth worker in Paris, said: “The street must be listened to, which isn’t the
case so far. It’s not only pensions it’s about people’s whole professional
lives and working conditions.”
Laurent
Berger, the head of the moderate CFDT union, said he would accept the
government’s offer of talks about general working conditions in France but only
if the pensions changes were first “put to one side”. He also called for the
appointment of a mediator between unions and the government saying this would
be “a gesture in favour of cooling off, and finding a way out”.
But the
government spokesman, Olivier Véran, said the pensions law was no longer up for
discussion. “It’s in the past now,” Véran said.

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