Paris police ready for living costs protest as fuel strike drags on

Author: AFP

Nearly three weeks into a strike that has forced filling stations across France to close, police in Paris were preparing for protests Sunday against soaring living costs.

Left-wing opponents of President Emmanuel Macron’s administration have organised the demonstration, which they say is also in protest against government inaction over climate change.

Jean-Luc Melenchon, leader of the left-wing France Unbowed (LFI) party, had planned the march well before the current strike, but organisers are hoping to pick up some of the momentum from the current industrial unrest.

“The rise in prices is unbearable,” LFI deputy Manon Aubry said. “It is the greatest loss of purchasing power in 40 years.”

It is time the billions that the big companies were reaping in profits were passed down to those struggling to make ends meet, she added.

Police are expecting around 30,000 people to attend, with one source saying they feared problems from hard-left troublemakers. “The organiser has been warned of these fears,” said the official.

The dispute at French refineries and fuel depots has forced many filling stations to close and had a knock-on effect across all sectors of the economy.

According to government figures issued Saturday to French broadcaster BFMTV, 27.3 percent of filling stations were short of at least one product: in the Paris region, that rose to 39.9 percent.

Four of France’s seven refineries and one fuel depot are still out of action after striking members of the hard-left CGT union rejected a pay offer from the hydrocarbon industry leader that other unions accepted.

They are furious that Macron’s government used requisitioning powers this week to force some strikers back to open fuel depots, a move that has so far been upheld by the courts.

But the union risks stoking resentment in a country where three-quarters of workers rely on personal vehicles for their jobs. One poll by BVA released Friday, suggested that public support for the strike was at just 37 percent.

The CGT is pushing for a 10-percent pay rise for staff at TotalEnergies, backdated to the beginning of the year.

It argues the French group can more than afford it, citing TotalEnergies’ net profit of $5.7 billion in the April-June period as energy prices soared with the war in Ukraine, and its payout of billions of euros in dividends to shareholders.

The union has extended its strike action, which started on September 26, up to Tuesday, when it has also called a broader strike involving public transport nationwide.

The CGT walked out of talks with the French group last week, even as other unions representing a majority of workers accepted a deal for a smaller pay hike. Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne is due to appear on primetime television Sunday evening to discuss the petrol shortage.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Pakistan

Labour Day — A reminder for better facilities to workers

When international labor community was observing International Labour Day, scores of illiterate laborers in Pakistan…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Xinjiang enjoys social stability, religious freedom and economic development

A delegation of Pakistani elite youth which recently visited Urumqi, Kashgar, and Atush said that…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Pakistan, Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan delegation visits Beijing

A delegation comprised over 15 participants from the Economic Cooperation Organization Science Foundation (ECOSF) including…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

COMSTECH partneres with Chinese University for training program in China

The Committee on Science and Technology of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (COMSTECH) has partnered…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Street gang war leaves shopkeeper dead in Lahore’s Model Town

A cross-firing between two rival groups on Model Town Link Raod claimed the life of…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Woman kidnaps her own son in Narowal

A woman with the help of her lover kidnapped her own son in Narowal, police…

6 hours ago