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Striking opera musicians wave to the crowd after performing outside the Palais Garnier opera house.
Striking opera musicians wave to the crowd after performing outside the Palais Garnier opera house. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP
Striking opera musicians wave to the crowd after performing outside the Palais Garnier opera house. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP

Police fire teargas as gilets jaunes protests return to Paris

This article is more than 4 years old

Clashes come on 45th day of strike with 59 arrests and claims police beat protester

French police fired teargas under a rain of projectiles, used stun grenades and arrested dozens of people on Saturday as thousands of “yellow vest” anti-government protesters returned to the streets of Paris.

Demonstrators shouted slogans denouncing the police, the president, Emmanuel Macron, and his pension reforms that have triggered the longest French transport strike in decades.

The previous night, Macron and his wife, Brigitte, had to be rushed from a Paris theatre after protesters tried to burst in and disrupt the performance.

With sirens wailing, riot police drove across the French capital in dozens of vans Saturday to the route where thousands of protesters marched.

The police said 59 people had been arrested by the early afternoon.

There were further allegations of police violence after video footage shot by AFPTV and others showed a young man, his face covered in blood, being arrested and beaten.

Young people wearing masks shouted “revolution” as teargas drifted by the Bastille, the square where the French revolution erupted in 1789.

“The street is ours,” some protesters chanted. “Macron, we’re going to come for you, in your home.”

Saturday’s clashes came on the 45th day of a strike that has hit train and metro traffic and caused misery for millions of commuters in and around Paris in particular. Trains are becoming more frequent, however, and Paris’s metro drivers voted to suspend their action from Monday, their union UNSA announced on Saturday.

The protests were also the latest of the weekly demonstrations held every Saturday by the gilet jaunes (yellow vest) movement since November 2018, and which have been boosted by those opposed to the pension reforms.

“We’re suffocating with this government who wants to put us on our knees,” said Annie Moukam, a 58-year-old teacher among the protesters. “It’s out of the question that he (Macron) touches our pensions. We have worked all our lives to be able to leave with a dignified retirement,” she added.

Macron’s reforms aim to forge a single pensions system from the country’s 42 separate regimes. The various systems currently in place offer early retirement and other benefits to some public-sector workers as well as lawyers, physical therapists and even Paris Opera employees.

Critics say the reforms will in effect force millions of people to work longer for a smaller pension.

The transport unions have joined forces with the yellow vests, who accuse Macron of ruling on behalf of an urban elite while ignoring people in the provinces and the countryside, many of whom struggle to make ends meet.

The unions are looking for a second wind as their movement begins to flag, with the proportion of striking workers at national railway operator SNCF falling to less than 5% on Friday.

The Louvre in Paris, the world’s most visited museum, reopened on Saturday after being shut down by workers opposed to the pension overhaul.

The Louvre was shut down by workers on Friday but reopened on Saturday,
Photograph: Christophe Petit-Tesson/EPA

On Friday, hundreds of disappointed visitors massed outside the Louvre, some hurling insults at strikers who had blocked the entrance. It was the first time since the strike began on 5 December that the museum had shut completely, although it was forced to close some galleries last month.

But there was no sign of an end to the strike at the Paris Opera, which has lost €14m (£11.9m) with the cancellation of 67 performances.

The Paris Opera orchestra on Saturday gave renditions of Carmen and other works to Parisians and tourists on the steps of the Palais Garnier to show support for the strike. Under a stream of confetti, they finished with La Marseillaise, the national anthem. Supporters chanted “Long live the strike”.

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