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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
National
RFI with Anne-Marie Bissada

More transport chaos expected as French strike enters day 41

Paris-region commuters wait to board a train at the Chateau de Vincennes metro station as a strike against government plans to reform the pension system entered its 33rd consecutive day on Monday, 6 January 2020. Reuters/Charles Platiau

Despite small improvements to the flow of public transportation in Paris, the regional transport company RATP asked commuters to find alternative means of getting around as the trains, trams and buses continue to be jammed with people.

National rail operator SNCF announced that eight of ten high-speed TGV train were operating, but regional trains still remain affected providing more intermittent service.

Latest outline of available transportation in Paris for Tuesday January 14, 2020
Latest outline of available transportation in Paris for Tuesday January 14, 2020 RATP

It also added that the number striking staffers had fallen to 4.3 percent, the lowest rate since the strike began on 5 December.

Pivot age

Over the weekend, Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced that he would drop plans for a “pivot age” that would raise the official age for a full pension from 62 to 64, a major point of contention by many of the unions.

President Emmanuel Macron applauded that move calling it a “constructive and responsible compromise,” as did the more moderate union the CFDT.

But the more hardline unions of CGT, FO and Solidaires were not impressed by that change, and have called for another major demonstration on Thursday.

"When you can't convince with ideas you use good old-fashioned methods like repression," said CGT leader Philippe Martinez as he denounced Philippe's comments.

He described the concession announced by the premier as no more than a "smokescreen… to make us work longer."

Forty-two existing pensions

"The end of the pivot age does not mean the end of the strike," said Laurent Berger, head of the CFDT in an interview with RTL Radio.

"We are far from being at the end of this story on the universal system for pensions and we will need to keep up the pressure," added Berger.

Central to the strike is the proposal to take the current 42 pension plans and unify them into one universal system.

The strike has continued to spread outside the transportation sector, with staff at the Paris Opera and lawyers from the Order of Lawyers in Lyon also joining the movement.

The first opera performance of 2020 set for Saturday at the Paris Garnier was cancelled.

French climber Alain Robert, known as France’s "Spiderman", made his own contribution to support the protests on Monday by climbing up a towering skyscraper just outside Paris in the La Defense business district.

"I'm 57, so technically not far from retirement. And climbing is the only way I make money," Robert said before being detained after his illicit 52-minute climb.

"Will I have to keep climbing solo until I'm 64? Or even 67?" he added.

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