French Police, Protesters Clash for Third Night over Macron’s Pension Reform
Nationwide industrial action
Earlier in the French capital, a group of students and activists from the “Revolution Permanente” collective briefly invaded the Forum des Halles shopping mall, waving banners calling for a general strike and shouting “Paris stand up, rise up”, videos on social media showed.
BFM television also showed images of demonstrations under way in cities such as Compiegne in the north, Nantes in the west and Marseille in the south.
In Bordeaux, in the southwest, police also used tear gas against protesters who had started a fire.
“There is no place for violence. One must respect parliamentary democracy,” Digital Transition and Telecommunications Minister Jean-Noel Barrot told Sud radio.
A broad alliance of France’s main unions has said it would continue to mobilise to try to force a U-turn on the changes.
Rubbish has been piling up on the streets of Paris after refuse workers joined in the action.
A day of nationwide industrial action is scheduled for Thursday.
Some 37 percent of operational staff at TotalEnergies’ refineries and depots — at sites including Feyzin in southeast France and Normandy in the north — were on strike on Saturday, a company spokesperson said.
Rolling strikes continued on the railways.
While eight days of nationwide protests since mid-January, and many local industrial actions, have so far been largely peaceful, the unrest over the last three days is reminiscent of the Yellow Vest protests which erupted in late 2018 over high fuel prices.