French yellow vests protest for 16th straight weekend

Published March 3, 2019
Colmar (France): Yellow Vests protesters stand next to a Statue of Liberty wearing a yellow vest as they take part in an anti-government demonstration on Saturday.—AFP
Colmar (France): Yellow Vests protesters stand next to a Statue of Liberty wearing a yellow vest as they take part in an anti-government demonstration on Saturday.—AFP

PARIS: French yellow vests were protesting for a 16th straight weekend in Paris and other cities to show they are still mobilised against the government’s economic policies they see as favouring the rich.

In Paris, protesters gathered at the Arc de Triomphe monument as a march was planned through the well-off western neighbourhoods of the capital.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday reiterated a call for calm, pointing at “unacceptable” outbreaks of violence since the movement began in November.

Organisers say they want to maintain pressure on the government as a two-month “grand debate” initiated by Macron to let ordinary French people express their views on the country’s economic and democratic issues is ending this month.

Sophie Tissier, a coordinator of the Paris protest, said that “we keep protesting every Saturday because Macron doesn’t respond at all to the yellow vests’ demands. We want to rebuild our democracy and change today’s political system.” “Macron is contemptuous and ... does not even try to understand that there are people that are living in great poverty and precariousness, and that there are so many inequalities,” she added.

Other protests are taking place in France’s major cities of Marseille, Lyon, Bordeaux, Lille and others.

The movement was named after the fluorescent vests that French motorists must carry in their vehicles for emergencies.

The protests started in November to oppose fuel tax hikes, but have expanded into a broader public rejection of Macron’s economic policies, which protesters say favour big businesses and the wealthy over ordinary workers.

Macron has since announced a package of measures worth about 10 billion euros ($11.4 billion) to boost workers’ and retirees’ purchasing power and launched a national debate that is taking place through meetings across France and a dedicated website until mid-March.

Published in Dawn, March 3rd, 2019

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