Union boss remains defiant

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French gendarmes escort protesters during a demonstration of rail workers and employees of Paris' RATP public transport operator near the Gare de l'Est railway station in Paris on December 26, 2019, as part of a nationwide multi-sector strike against French government's pensions overhaul. (Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP)

PARIS: The head of a hardline French trade union on Friday vowed to press on with a crippling strike that has cast a shadow over Christmas celebrations, with the stoppages entering a fourth week and becoming the longest-lasting such action since the 1980s.

The strike against pension reforms championed by President Emmanuel Macron began on December 5 and has seen most of the Paris metro shut down ever since and only a fraction of inter-city trains running.

Now on day 23, the union stoppage is longer than the notorious 22-day strike of the winter of 1995 under late president Jacques Chirac against welfare cutbacks which forced the then government into a U-turn.

The longest transport strike in France lasted for 28 days, also over Christmas, in 1986 and early 1987. Calls by Macron and others for a holiday truce have gone unheeded.

“It’s a strong movement and still supported by public opinion,” said Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the CGT union as he visited picketing workers at a bus depot.

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French gendarmes escort protesters during a demonstration of rail workers and employees of Paris’ RATP public transport operator near the Gare de l’Est railway station in Paris on Thursday. Photo: AFP

He lashed out at Prime Minister Edouard Philippe, who has said he wants no confrontation with the strikers, accusing him of not being true to his word.

“The government shows how agitated it is with this kind of conception of social dialogue,” said Martinez.

Transport in Paris remained paralysed on Friday, a day the French capital would normally be crammed with shoppers seeking post-Christmas bargains or preparing for the New Year.

There appears to be no end in sight to the current walkouts with talks between the government and unions only set to resume on January 7 and major demonstrations planned two days later.

Just two driverless metro lines worked normally Friday and five lines were completely shut down. National rail operator SNCF said six out of every 10 high-speed TGV trains were running.

SNCF said in a statement that while 8.5 percent of its total employees were on strike, 38.8 percent of drivers were not working. It said just 35 percent of scheduled TGVs would be working on New Year’s Day and 50 percent on January 2. – AFP

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