Hundreds of thousands to continue strikes and
protests in France
Fears of more violent clashes with police as
demonstrations against Macron’s unpopular pensions policy to carry on
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
@achrisafis
Tue 28 Mar
2023 05.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/mar/28/strikes-protests-france-macron-pensions-clashes
Hundreds of
thousands of people are expected to take part in street protests and strikes
across France on Tuesday amid fears of violent clashes with police, as
demonstrations continue over Emmanuel Macron’s use of constitutional executive
powers to push through an unpopular raise of the pension age.
The protest
movement against raising the age from 62 to 64 is the biggest domestic crisis
of Macron’s second term, with the strikes on Tuesday expected to affect
refineries, bin collections, rail transport, air travel and schools.
Authorities in Paris and several cities are braced for clashes between police
and protesters.
The crisis
has intensified because of controversy over policing tactics, with lawyers
complaining of arbitrary arrests, injuries and heavy-handedness during crowd
control.
A
30-year-old man was fighting for his life in a coma on Monday after
anti-government feeling spread beyond the issue of pensions to environmental
demonstrations at the weekend in the west of France – spurred by the impact of
new water storage facilities for crop irrigation.
The man
suffered head trauma during clashes between protesters and police. An
investigation is under way to determine the circumstances.
The IGPN,
the internal affairs unit of the French police, said it had launched 17
investigations into incidents and allegations against police across France in
recent weeks.
More than
30 lawyers wrote an open letter to Le Monde on Monday stating their “great
concern” over what they called arbitrary arrests of hundreds of people,
accusing the police of using the judicial system and arrests as a tactic to put
people off protesting.
The head of
Paris police has said all arrests were justified. The interior minister Gérald
Darmanin said many police officers had been injured during the protests.
The Council
of Europe said on Friday that peaceful protesters and journalists had to be
protected from police violence and arbitrary arrest.
What began
as two months of regular, peaceful trade union-organised strike days has
shifted to more impromptu protest gatherings over the past 10 days.
There have
been pockets of unrest in many cities and towns after dark, with fires lit on
streets and property vandalised.
Attacks on
politicians’ constituency offices have increased since Macron’s decision to
push through the pensions changes, bypassing the lower-house of parliament.
A
preparatory note by French intelligence services ahead of Tuesday’s trade
union-led day of strike and protests said there was likely to be many more
young people taking part, perhaps twice or three times as many as on the last
big day of strike action last Thursday, French media reported.
According
to the daily Le Parisien, the note said “the topic of repression and police
violence … could focus young people’s anger”.
Many young
people at first “didn’t feel affected” by the pensions changes, but then
decided to join the movement last week, “indignant” at the use of executive
powers contained in article 49.3 of the constitution to bypass parliament,
after the government feared it would not get enough votes.
Authorities
are expecting clashes and violence similar to last Thursday’s coordinated
strike day, when Paris saw bus stops, newspaper kiosks and traffic lights
smashed and hundreds of fires lit on pavements amid running clashes with
police.
Public
buildings have also been targeted, including Bordeaux city hall and a police
station in Lorient. The interior ministry blamed “far-left” groups.
Already on
Monday, trade unions had stepped up strikes. The Louvre museum in Paris was
blocked by striking museum workers and could not open.
Pickets
continued at petrol depots and waste incinerators, particularly surrounding
Paris, where 8,000 tonnes of rubbish are still piling up in streets across half
of the city after weeks of bin strikes. Paris city hall said it would clear
piles of refuse from the route of Tuesday’s street march to try to avoid fires
being lit.
France’s
civil aviation authority has told airlines at Orly airport in Paris, as well as
at airports in Bordeaux, Marseille and Toulouse, to cancel 20% of flights for
Tuesday and Wednesday. High school unions said that up to 200 schools were
blockaded by pupils.
Macron
summoned the prime minister, Élisabeth Borne, as well as government ministers
and senior politicians for crisis meetings on Monday as tensions ran high.
The French
president was supposed to have been hosting King Charles for a day of pomp and
ceremony on Monday, but had to cancel the state visit because of the strikes
and demonstrations. French opposition politicians on the left and right said
France’s image and diplomacy had been damaged by the last-minute cancellation.
“We have to
find the right path … we need to calm down,” Borne told AFP, saying the
government would not drop the pension changes. She said she was ready for
dialogue with unions on other labour issues, including demanding jobs,
conditions for older workers and retraining.
But Laurent
Berger, the head of the moderate CFDT union, who has taken an unexpectedly hard
line against the pension reform, said he would accept the offer of talks but
only if the reform was first “put to one side”.
The
government has vowed to hold firm, uncertain of how many more days of strike
action would be called. Berger said the prime minister must come up with a
“very big move on pensions”.


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