PARIS: Fresh strikes hit trains, schools and refineries in France on Tuesday (Feb 7) over an unpopular pension reform pushed by President Emmanuel Macron, with nationwide protests planned for later in the day.
A third day of union-backed demonstrations since Jan 19 is set to test momentum for the protest movement which has vowed to block Macron’s bid to raise the retirement age.
“We are dealing with a president – because he is at the heart of all this – who, with his over-sized ego, wants to prove that he is capable of passing this reform,” the head of the hardline CGT union, Philippe Martinez, told RTL radio.
Macron put raising the retirement age and encouraging the French to work more at the heart of his re-election campaign last year, but polls estimate that two-thirds of people are against the changes.
Lawmakers began debating the reform, which would see the age for a full pension raised from 62 to 64 and the mandatory number of years of work extended for a full pension, during a stormy session in parliament on Monday.
Last week’s demonstrations brought out 1.3 million people across the country while a first round on Jan 19 saw 1.1 million, according to the police.
A security source told AFP that between 900,000 and 1.1 million people were expected on Tuesday.
The crowds so far have been the largest anti government protests since 2010 during pension reform by right-wing former president Nicolas Sarkozy.
“REFORM OR BANKRUPTCY”
Trains and the Paris metro again faced “severe disruptions”, while around one in five flights at Orly airport south of the capital were expected to be cancelled.
But the overall level of disruption, including in schools, was expected to be lower than on the previous two days.
Around half of long-distance trains were running, the state railway company said.
“It’s ok, it’s manageable,” Sylvain Magnan, a 23-year-old told AFP at the main station in the city of Marseille on the Mediterranean. “I just took a later train.”
Around one in two workers at oil refineries run by energy giant TotalEnergies had stopped work, the company said, but stocks at petrol stations are sufficiently high to handle any temporary pause in deliveries.
Macron’s proposals would bring France closer in line with its European neighbours, most of which have retirement ages of 65 or more.
But the government has struggled to defend the overhaul as necessary or fair, given that the system is currently in balance and that low-skilled workers are said by many economists to bear the brunt of the changes.
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