Emmanuel Macron accosted by gilets jaunes as he
takes Bastille Day walk
Call for increased security as French president tells
demonstrators ‘be cool’
Agence
France-Presse in Paris
Wed 15 Jul
2020 15.18 BSTLast modified on Wed 15 Jul 2020 18.06 BST
Anti-government
gilets jaunes (yellow vests) hurled abuse at Emmanuel Macron as he walked with
his wife, Brigitte, on Bastille Day in a public garden in Paris, prompting
calls from opposition leaders for increased security.
Demonstrators
confronted the French president and his wife, Brigitte, as they walked with
bodyguards in the Tuileries Gardens in Paris on Tuesday.
In a video
on the gilets jaunes Facebook page, what appears to be a few dozen protesters
boo and shout “Macron demission!” (Macron resign) as they surround the
presidential party, many filming on their phones.
“It’s
incredible, we’ve stumbled upon the thorn in our side,” one protester is heard
saying.
While
security guards look on, Macron engages in a close encounter with the agitated
men, who wave fingers in his face while complaining about economic inequality
and heavy-handed policing of protests.
Neither
Macron nor the demonstrators in the video were wearing face masks, recommended
for preventing coronavirus contagion. The heated exchange lasted about six
minutes.
“It poses a
real security problem,” Christian Jacob, the head of the opposition rightwing
party, the Republicans, told French television. “How can the president of the
republic take such risks?”
The
leftwing leader, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, said Macron should have been more
“cautious” as “a president walking in the Tuileries where there are so many
people should expect to come across detractors”.
But a
government spokesman, Gabriel Attal, said on Wednesday the incident underlined
Macron’s “absolute openness to dialogue”, pointing out that his opponents often
criticised him for being too distant from the people. “The president of the
republic can leave the Elysee [the presidential residence], and fortunately
so,” Attal said.
In the
video, Macron is seen repeatedly urging the group confronting him to “be cool”,
while taking time to listen to some of their complaints.
He said he
understood their “feeling of injustice”. In response to complaints about
alleged police abuses, he pointed out that “there are also violent people among
yourselves”.
“This is a
public holiday [Bastille Day], I am taking a walk with my wife, and you are
heckling me,” Macron tells one of them.
According
to an official count, about 2,500 demonstrators and 1,800 law enforcement
agents have been injured in the weekly gilets jaunes protests, which began in
November 2018. The protests had largely faded by the summer of 2019, though
sporadic protests drawing much smaller crowds have continued.
The
rallies, which started as a protest against a loss of spending power and
Macron’s perceived contempt for ordinary people, often sparked confrontations
and riots. Activists say two dozen civilians have lost an eye from police used
rubber bullets, and five have lost a hand to stun grenades.
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