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Protesters clash with police in Paris as Yellow Vest protests get underway

By RFI with David Roe
France REUTERSCharles Platiau
NOV 16, 2019 LISTEN
REUTERS/Charles Platiau

Overturned cars, paving stones and garbage fires -Place d'Italie, in the south of Paris, was the scene of sporadic outbreaks of violence on Saturday.

Demonstrators, many clad in black and hiding their faces, set trash bins on fire and hurled projectiles at riot police while building barricades.

Paris clashes
Clashes also broke out between demonstrators and police near the Porte de Champerret in the northwest of the city as protesters were preparing to march across town toward Gare d'Austerlitz.

Police also intervened to prevent a few hundred demonstrators from occupying the Paris ring road, according to Reuters TV footage.

Paris police said 33 people had been arrested by 1030 GMT.

The so-called yellow vest protests, named for the high-visibility jackets worn by demonstrators, erupted in mid-November 2018 over fuel price hikes and the high cost of living. The demonstrations spiraled into a broader movement against President Emmanuel Macron and his economic reforms.

The protests lost strength in recent months, going from tens of thousands of participants to just a few thousand, but the movement's leaders called for people to turn out on Saturday to mark the first anniversary.

At its peak in late 2018, the movement grew to up to 300,000 people.

Protests have been banned near tourists spots such as the Eiffel Tower and many subway stations were closed on Saturday.

Macron challenged
The yellow vest movement was one of the toughest challenges to Macron's presidency before it dwindled in the early summer.

The movement evolved from nationwide road blockades into a series of often-violent demonstrations that pitted rowdy protesters with police and have ravaged Paris and other major cities in the country.

The yellow vest crisis forced Macron to make policy concessions and delay the next big wave of reforms, including overhauling the pension and unemployment systems.

A survey by pollster Odoxa published two weeks ago showed nearly one in every two French people believed the protest movement might reawaken.

Macron's plans to simplify the unwieldy and expensive pension system, which he says will make it fairer, is particularly unpopular.

Trade unions have called on railway workers, Paris public transport staff, truck drivers and civil servants to strike against the pensions overhaul on Dec. 5, and in some cases beyond.

Students and yellow vest protesters have called for people to join forces with the unions.

On Thursday Macron promised money for hospitals in a bid to quell unrest among medics.

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