BFF-03 Police teargas ‘yellow vest’ protesters in Paris

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BFF-03

FRANCE-POLITICS-PROTEST

Police teargas ‘yellow vest’ protesters in Paris

PARIS, Dec 30, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Police fired tear gas at “yellow vest”
demonstrators in Paris on Saturday but the turnout for round seven of the
popular protests that have rocked France appeared low.

Several hundred people wearing the symbolic hi-visibility vests had
gathered near the offices of several state-run television stations and the
BFM TV channel in the centre of the capital shouting “Fake news” and calling
for the resignation of President Emmanuel Macron.

Protesters spilled onto tram lines and lobbed projectiles at police who
replied with tear gas grenades and detained several people.

Several cars were also set alight outside the offices of the Le Parisien
newspaper, although a fire service spokesman said it was not clear if the
blaze was linked to the protests.

Tear gas was also fired in Nantes, western France, and protests were
expected in Lyon, Bordeaux and Toulouse.

In the southern city of Marseille, police said around 1,000 protesters
turned out, amid cries of “Macron out”.

The official turnout numbers have plunged with the passing weeks, with
police saying some 12,000 had joined Saturday’s rally by midday. The
government recorded 38,600 demonstrators on December 22 compared to 282,000
for the first major demonstrations on November 17.

But leading figures within the movement that has flourished outside of
trade union and political groups, say the low numbers are due to the holiday
season and January will bring a resurgence of the street protests.

The focus of the protests has morphed from anger over fuel taxes to a broad
rebuke of Macron, accused by critics of neglecting the rising costs of living
for many in rural and small-town France.

“We want to get our purchasing power back and have a say in the decisions,”
said Priscillia Ludosky, who launched the yellow vest petition against fuel
price hikes.

Government tax concessions to boost disposable income among the low paid
“are not enough”, Ludosky said in Marseille.

The movement has increasingly targeted Macron and 40 “yellow vests” on
Thursday tried to storm the medieval fort of Bregancon that serves as his
official summer retreat on the Mediterranean before being turned back by
police.

Die-hard yellow vest supporters believe the movement will live on in 2019
and plans are underway for New Year’s Eve protests.

Nearly 8,000 people are listed on Facebook as intending to attend,
insisting it will be “festive and non-violent”.

Paris officials said preparations would continue for a fireworks display
and sound and light show on the Champs-Elysee, the epicentre of repeated
violent action against the government, with the Arc de Triomphe ransacked on
December 1.

Tens of thousands of tourists and locals traditionally ring in the new year
on the wide shopping boulevard, which rises to the Arc monument.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0919 hrs