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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
National
RFI

French unions hold second nationwide marches against pension reform

Public sector workers march in Paris against French President Emmanuel Macron's plans to reform the country's pension system, 10 December 2019. AFP/Bertrand Guay

Public services were disrupted around the country for a sixth day, especially in the capital, with only two of 16 metro lines offering full service and nine completely closed. Suburban RER trains were also disrupted.

French teachers staged a walkout and forced school closures for the second time in less than a week. Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer said the effects were felt in Paris the most, with around 35 percent of teachers walking out, compared with 12.5 percent nationwide.

Strikes also led airlines to cancel 20 percent of flights and for oil refineries to halt distribution.

Even French ballet dancers joined strikes against plans to reform France’s multi-tiered pension system, forcing the Paris Opera to cancel 11 shows at the historic Garnier and modern Bastille opera houses.

Unions urged rail workers, doctors and other public workers to also strike in hopes of keeping up participation in the largest challenge organised labour has made to Macron since his election in 2017.

French government to announce reform

Last Thursday’s first marches against the reform drew 806,000 people around the country, according to the government, while the CGT trade union federation claim as many as 1.5 million people participated.

Many participants in last week’s marches accused Macron of trying to roll back the country’s costly but cherished public services.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe is slated to unveil plans on Wednesday of how the government intends to replace France’s 42 separate pension plans with a single points-based system that would require people to work longer.

Philippe is expected to make concessions aimed at getting the changes through, even though unions have sounded an uncompromising note so far, saying they will not call off the strike unless the pension reform is scrapped entirely.

(with newswires)

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