A Day of Mass Strikes in France

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President Macron’s reform programme faces a make-or-break moment, as French unions stage a day of mass strikes and protests on Thursday against his plans to push back the age of retirement.

A new bill due to go through parliament will raise the official age at which people can stop work from 62 to 64.

Intercity and commuter train services are badly disrupted.

Many schools and other public services are shut. At Orly airport in Paris, one in five flights has been cancelled.”

On the Paris metro only the two driverless lines are working normally.

Large demonstrations drawing tens of thousands are expected in Paris and other cities, where police will be out in force in case of violence from ultra-left “black bloc” infiltrators.

Under the proposals outlined earlier this month by Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne, from 2027 people will have to work 43 years to qualify for a full pension, as opposed to 42 years now.

Hailed by the government as a vital measure to safeguard France’s share-out pension system, the reform is proving deeply unpopular among the public – with 68% saying they are opposed, according to an IFOP poll this week.

All the country’s unions – including so-called “reformist” unions that the government had hoped to win to its side – have condemned the measure, as have the left-wing and far-right oppositions in the National Assembly.

On Thursday the walls of the Élysée palace must tremble,” Communist Party leader Fabien Roussel said on Tuesday

 

 

BBC /Shakirat Sadiq

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