Macron calls for order after ‘yellow vest’ attack on police
38,600 people took part in a sixth round of nationwide protests on Saturday, around half the number that demonstrated a week earlier.
Demonstrators face riot police on the Champs Elysees avenue at the end of a protest of the French “yellow vests” (gilets jaunes) movement in central Paris on December 22, 2018 as the movement turned out in small numbers for a sixth Saturday of nationwide demonstrations. – In Paris, the scene of violent clashes in previous demonstrations, traffic was normal in the morning and most shops, except for some luxury boutiques, were open for business in the busy weekend before Christmas. (Photo by Sameer Al-Doumy / AFP)
French President Emmanuel Macron called for “order” on Sunday after a sixth weekend of “yellow vest” anti-government protests marked by dwindling participation and a violent attack on police in Paris.
Speaking during a visit to the central African state of Chad where he was visiting French troops serving in a counter-terrorism force Macron said: “There must be order now, calm and harmony. Our country needs it.”
“It needs harmony, unity, sincere commitment to strong collective causes and we must heal the divisions,” said the 41-year-old centrist, who has struggled to tamp down the anger of the working poor in small-town and rural France over falling spending power and policies seen as tilted towards the rich.
A total of 38,600 people took part in a sixth round of nationwide protests on Saturday, according to the interior ministry – around half the number that demonstrated a week earlier.
In Paris, the scene of fierce clashes and widespread destruction in previous weeks, the protests were mainly peaceful.
But as evening fell, violence broke out again on the iconic Champs-Elysees avenue.
In one incident that caused widespread outrage, a group of three police officers on motorbike were forced to make a hasty escape after coming under attack near the Champs-Elysees from a group of demonstrators, who threw electric scooters, paving stones and other objects at them.
A video of the incident, which was widely shared on social media, showed one officer pulling his gun and pointing it at the advancing protesters.
He and his two colleagues, one of whom had his motorbike knocked to the ground, then made their getaway.
The video showed that, seconds before the attack, the police had lobbed stun grenades at a group of protesters, who were some distance away.
Speaking to BFMTV channel, Macron said those responsible for the violence would face “the most severe” legal punishment.
Prime Minister Edouard Philippe for his part denounced the “incredible violence towards the police”.
He also took aim at protesters who sang a song by controversial comedian Dieudonne M’Bala M’Bala, a convicted anti-Semite, outside Sacre-Coeur church in Pari,s as well as those who decapitated an effigy of Macron in the western Charente region – two other incidents seen as evidence of growing radicalisation and the presence of extremists within the movement.
“There can be no trivialising of such gestures which must draw unanimous condemnation and be punished by the law,” Philippe tweeted.
The number of demonstrators has been trending downwards since 282,000 people turned out for the first Saturday protest against planned fuel tax hikes on November 17.
From there the protests quickly morphed into a full-scale revolt against Macron’s policies, aloof, top-down governing style, and the political class as a whole.
Leader faces charges
Saturday’s numbers represented a sharp drop from last week, however, when Macron announced an income increase for minimum-wage earners and rolled back tax increases on pensioners, among other measures.
Around 2,000 protesters gathered in Paris, compared to 4,000 last week, police said.
A total of 142 people were detained and 19 taken into police custody in the capital, including one of leaders of the movement, Eric Drouet.
Drouet, a truck driver, was to be brought before an investigating magistrate Sunday to be charged with carrying an illegal weapon in the form of a block of wood and “participating in a group formed to commit violence or destruction”. He denies the charges.
The protests have dealt a blow to the French economy, particularly the retail trade.
Junior economy minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher said French stores reported an average drop-off of 25 percent in sales compared with the same period a year earlier.
Ten people have died in incidents linked to the demonstrations, mostly in accidents at roadblocks set up by the protesters.
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