France set for more ‘yellow vest’ protests despite Macron concessions

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PARIS, Dec 15, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Thousands of France’s “yellow vest”
demonstrators were expected to take to the streets again on Saturday, a month
after the start of their protest movement which has plunged President
Emmanuel Macron’s government into its biggest crisis.

The number of protesters who turn out could determine the fate of the
movement, five days after Macron announced a series of tax and wage
concessions in a bid to end the unrest.

The last three Saturdays have been marked by violent demonstrations, with
barricades being set on fire on the Champs-Elysees.

Until now, however, the nation-wide grassroots movement has been backed by
a majority of French people, but two polls published on Tuesday — in the
wake of Macron’s concessions — found the country was now split broadly 50-50
on whether protests should continue.

Demonstrations started on November 17 in opposition to hikes in fuel taxes,
but have since snowballed into a broader opposition to Macron’s pro-business
agenda and style of government.

Images of road blocks, massive traffic jams and mobs rioting on the streets
of Paris have dented France’s image, as well as Macron’s hopes of forcing
through more business-friendly reforms.

Many of the movement’s figureheads, along with leaders of the far-left
Unbowed France party, have urged protesters to turn out, particularly in
Paris, to pressure the government into making further concessions.

– Need for calm –

Others have suggested that the mostly small town and rural protesters
should show resolve by rallying in the regions rather than heading for the
capital where large numbers of security forces are being deployed in the
expectation of violence fomented by many far-right and far-left agitators.

France “needs calm, order and to go back to its normal functioning,” Macron
said Friday. But he refrained from directly calling for protesters to stay at
home.

Speaking in the wake of a terrorist attack Tuesday in the eastern city of
Strasbourg, which left four dead and 12 wounded, Interior minister Christophe
Castaner criticised “yellow vests” who clashed with police in southern France
Thursday night at a time when hundreds of security forces were involved in
tracking the fugitive killer who was later shot dead.

“I find it inadmissable that today we are applauding our police and then
tomorrow some people think it’s ok to go and throw stones at them,” Castaner
said Friday morning, referring to how people in Strasbourg clapped to thank
the police after news of the suspect’s death.

In a bid to end the protests, Macron has cancelled the planned fuel tax
hikes and offered a rise in the minimum wage, tax relief for pensioners and
tax-free overtime for workers in 2019.

The total package has been estimated by economists to cost up to 15 billion
euros ($17 billion), which is expected to be financed mostly by government
borrowing.

But some protesters think they should capitalise on the concessions.

“What Macron did on Monday, was a call to carry on because he has started
to give ground, which is unusual for him,” a senior figure in the “yellow
vest” movement, Eric Drouet, said in a video posted on Facebook.

Around 8,000 police will be on duty in Paris on Saturday, the same number
as last weekend, backed up by 14 armoured vehicles, water cannon and horses.

Around 90,000 security forces were mobilised last Saturday across France
and 2,000 people detained, around half of them in Paris.

Six people have died in the protests — most as a result of traffic-related
accidents — and hundreds have been injured.