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May 28, 2016

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Hollande to ‘stand firm’ as unrest sweeps France

FRENCH President Francois Hollande yesterday vowed to “stand firm” over a controversial labor law as unions called on workers to step up a wave of industrial action gripping the country.

France is battling fuel shortages, transport disruption and violent demonstrations, just as it gears up to host the Euro 2016 football championships in two weeks’ time.

“I will stand firm because I think it is a good reform,” Hollande told reporters at a G7 summit in Japan.

He said the government’s top priority was to ensure the “normal functioning of the economy” in the face of the most severe industrial action for two decades, including blockades of oil refineries and fuel depots that have left gasoline pumps running dry.

While there were still long queues at filling stations in some parts of the country, the situation eased slightly in some areas as union blockades of fuel depots were lifted.

Riot police moved in to sweep away a blockade of burning tires at an oil depot near a refinery in Donge, western France.

But motorists in Paris were restricted to buying 40 euros’ (US$45) of petrol per person at many stations, where queues built up ahead of the weekend.

Strikes also continued at nuclear power stations — which provide three-quarters of the country’s electricity — but have so far failed to affect supply, authorities said.

The employers’ federation, Medef, expressed growing anger over the effect the strikes are having on France’s fragile economic growth.

Medef chief Pierre Gattaz condemned the “thugs’ methods” of the unions and urged the government to “resist their blackmail.”

Small business owners were feeling the pinch too.

“It’s not good for business. I support helping people but not people who do nothing,” said Guillaume Bouvelot, 51, who owns a snack bar in an affluent district of Paris.

The legislation at the heart of the dispute aims to reform France’s notoriously rigid labor laws by making it easier for companies to hire and fire workers. And the social unrest showed little sign of easing as unions urged workers to pile the pressure on Hollande’s deeply unpopular Socialist government.

Representatives of the main unions urged workers to “multiply and support” the strikes.

They said the government’s response to the strikes and its “stubbornness” in refusing to withdraw the contested law was only “boosting the determination” of opponents to the reforms.




 

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