Heated protests rage through France against pension reforms
- Protests raged in France on Thursday as opposition to the higher pension age reached new levels, with heated opposition in Bordeaux, Nantes and Rennes in the evening, according to reports, while police in Paris used tear gas in the afternoon.
- Post By Ivan Kolekevski
- 21:48, 23 March, 2023
Paris, 23 March 2023 (dpa/MIA) - Protests raged in France on Thursday as opposition to the higher pension age reached new levels, with heated opposition in Bordeaux, Nantes and Rennes in the evening, according to reports, while police in Paris used tear gas in the afternoon.
There was a fire at the end of a demonstration at the Bordeaux City Hall, according to regional reporters.
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said more than 120 members of the security forces had been injured and that more than 80 people had been arrested.
Earlier, government opponents blocked railway stations, roads and part of the Charles-de-Gaulle international airport in Paris.
The Interior Ministry said 1.09 million people turned out across France. The CGT union said 3.5 million people took part.
Around 12,000 police officers were deployed.
French trade unions have called for new nationwide strikes and protests on Tuesday, during a visit by British King Charles III.
Strike and protest days had been mostly peaceful for weeks, but recent days saw increasing violence during spontaneous demonstrations.
"We want non-violent actions that respect property and people," said Laurent Berger of the CFDT multi-sector union in a bid to calm the situation.
The protests are directed against the gradual increase of the retirement age from 62 to 64, and more generally against the actions of the centre-right government of President Emmanuel Macron.
There have been repeated protests against the government's plans, which aim to close a looming gap in the pension fund with the reform.
A week ago, the stand-off also intensified as the government pushed the text of the reform through the National Assembly without a vote.
On Monday evening, two motions of no confidence in the government failed, which resulted in the reform being passed.
It is now being examined by the Constitutional Council, but no date has been set for it to make any ruling. Macron wants the reform to come into force by the end of the year.
The reform was "very difficult," the president said television interview a day earlier. "We are asking people to make an effort. It's never popular."
But, "Between the polls and the short-termism and the general interest of the country, I choose the general interest of the country," he added in defence of the reform.
Due to the strike, trains and flights were cancelled again on Thursday, and high schools and universities were partially blocked. The ongoing blockade of oil depots resulted in at least one fuel to be missing at 15% of the country's petrol stations, according to the BFMTV broadcaster.
Photo: EPA