At least 108 police injured and 291 held in May
Day protests in cities across France
Teargas fired amid clashes as unions turn traditional
marches into anti-government protest against pension reform
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
@achrisafis
Tue 2 May
2023 02.58 BST
French
police fired teargas and clashed with demonstrators in Paris and other cities
on Monday after trade unions transformed their traditional Labour Day marches
into anti-government demonstrations against the rise in the retirement age.
At least
108 police were wounded and 291 people detained across France as violence
erupted in several cities on the sidelines of the main union-led marches, the
interior minister, Gérald Darmanin, said. In Paris, 25 police were injured and
111 people were detained. One police officer suffered serious burns to his
hands and face after being hit by a petrol bomb, he said.
Darmanin
condemned protesters he described as being from the far-left, known as “black
blocs”, saying they numbered around 2,000 in Paris and another 1,000 in the
southeastern city of Lyon. He urged that “those who attacked the police and
public property be severely punished”.
The prime
minister, Élisabeth Borne, praised the earlier marches and said the responsible
attitude shown earlier made the violence “all the more unacceptable”.
In Paris, the
trade union-led demonstration began peacefully with many families joining in,
holding banners calling for social justice and demanding Macron resign or
withdraw his law to raise the minimum eligible pension age from 62 to 64.
But on the
edges of the march as it passed through Paris’s 11th arrondissement, police
fired teargas and clashed with groups of young men dressed in black.
Projectiles, bins and petrol bombs were thrown at police.
Some Paris
bus stops and shop fronts were smashed and graffitied with anti-police slogans.
As the march reached its end point at Place de la Nation, police fired teargas
and pushed back crowds as demonstrators threw projectiles.
There was
also unrest in Lyon, where several cars were set alight and the windows of some
businesses were smashed. In Nantes in western France, bins were piled up and
set alight in front of an administration building, shop windows were smashed
and police fired teargas after protesters threw projectiles. A demonstrator in
Nantes was treated by paramedics for a serious injury to his hand.
In
Marseille, a group of more than 100 demonstrators briefly occupied a luxury
hotel near the old port before being pushed back by police. Teargas was also
fired in Toulouse and Rennes.
Police had
been given a last-minute go-ahead to use drones as a security measure after a
Paris court rejected a petition from rights groups for them not to be used.
The
interior minister, Darmanin, tweeted that while “the great majority of demonstrators
were of course peaceful”, in Paris, Lyon and Nantes, police had faced
“extremely violent rioters who had one objective: kill a police officer and
steal property”. He said the violence should be condemned.
In separate
protests, environmental activists from Extinction Rebellion sprayed orange
paint on the facade of the Fondation Louis Vuitton museum in Paris, which is
backed by the luxury goods giant LVMH. A different environmental protest group
sprayed orange paint around the Place Vendôme in central Paris, known for its
jewellery shops, and targeted the facade of the justice ministry.
Last month,
Macron signed into law an unpopular rise in the minimum eligible age for state
pensions from 62 to 64, despite months of strikes. There had been sporadic
unrest and clashes with police after an executive order was used to push the
law through parliament without a vote.
Macron and
the government are now trying to move on from the pensions crisis, with the
president making several visits to provincial France in recent days, but
protesters have booed and banged pots and pans. Trade unions said the mood of
anger in France had not subsided.
Unions had
called for a big turnout on Monday and the demonstrations were larger than
standard Labour Day marches, with hundreds of thousands attending about 300
demonstrations across France.
Sonia
Paccaud of the moderate CFDT union old Le Monde that “violent groups who have
nothing to do with the struggles we’re leading” had taken advantage of the
peaceful trade union march in Lyon.
The
far-right leader Marine Le Pen, whose National Rally is the biggest opposition
party in parliament, held a May Day gathering in the Normandy port of Le Havre,
accusing Macron of stoking tensions in society.
Macron’s
centrist grouping lacks an absolute majority in parliament, making it hard for
the government to push through new legislation after the row over pensions.
After three months of intermittent strike days and demonstrations against the
pensions law, the government is also struggling to re-engage with voters.
The centrist
François Bayrou, whose Mouvement Démocrate party (MoDem) is allied with
Macron’s parliamentary group, said France needed “healing and reconciliation”.
He said the pensions law had been badly explained by politicians. “I don’t
think it’s specific to France, but public opinion and French people no longer
tolerate decisions being made far away from them without being informed of the
reason for those decisions,” he told French radio.
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