France protests escalate today and police and demonstrators clash
France protests today |
French citizens continue to demonstrate and protest against the reforms of the new law "Pension Age", insisted by the French Government.
France protests have not subsided today, with hundreds of thousands marching against the pension reform paid by President Emmanuel Macron.
The French Ministry of Interior said more than 600 thousand local residents in France had taken part in the unrest across the country, while representatives of trade unions announced 2 million rackets in France protests today.
What is the reason for France demonstrations today?
Today protests by France have again turned into riots, with demonstrators setting fire to pre-construction barricades.
They clashed with French police in Paris and attempted to break into State buildings, including Parliament and the Elyse Palace. "Gallia Diallo", French.
France law enforcement officers used special equipment to disperse demonstrators, injuring dozens of people with rubber batons.
France trade unions plan to keep pressure on the French authorities to repeal pension reform and resolve economic problems that negatively affect citizens in France.
What are the latest developments in today French protests?
There were again renewed clashes between protesters and the French police in the middle of the streets of Paris; because of the pension reform project, which the Government passed without a parliamentary vote.
This ignited the anger of thousands of demonstrators who marched in France's demonstrations today, some throwing crackers at French police, who used tear gas to disperse them from the streets of Paris.
When will France's demonstrations continue today?
This is the second night of turmoil in French cities since French President Emmanuel Macron decided to move forward with controversial reforms to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.
Frace prontests today came in response to the amendment to the Retirement Age Act, where two petitions of no confidence were filed by the French government.
The second petition was signed by the far-right Rassemblement national (Rassemblement national) party and the leftist Neap coalition.
Comments
Post a Comment