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Thread: Why I love the French (sometimes)

  1. #1
    Partridge Guest

    Why I love the French (sometimes)

    France general strike threatened
    BBC


    French trade union leaders are threatening to call a general strike unless the government withdraws a new youth employment law by Monday.

    More than 160 people were arrested on Saturday after violence erupted in Paris following a day of largely peaceful demonstrations across France. Police used tear gas and water cannon to battle masked youths who smashed shop windows and set vehicles alight.

    Trades unions say the law will allow employers to exploit young people. But the government says it will cut youth unemployment by making the labour market more flexible.

    48-hour deadline

    Unions said 1.5 million demonstrators took part in more than 150 rallies across the country against the government's First Employment Contract (CPE) on Saturday.

    The interior ministry put the overall turnout at just over 500,000.

    Protest organisers have given Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin until Monday night to withdraw the legislation, at which point union leaders will meet to decide what to do next.

    "Of course it is an ultimatum. The government and the president have effectively 48 hours to decide," Rene Valadon from the Workers' Force (FO) union said.

    Bernard Thibault, head of the powerful General Labour Confederation (CGT), said that "if nothing moves we will propose preparing a day of general work stoppages in the coming days. Conditions are such that it should be a success".

    President under pressure

    Government spokesman Jean-Francois Cope said on Saturday night that the government wanted dialogue, but gave no indication that it was prepared to withdraw the law.

    "Beyond the passions of the moment, don't we all have an interest in a dialogue? The door is open," Mr Cope said.

    Student and union leaders have been calling upon President Jacques Chirac to not sign the law, as he is required to do for it to take effect as expected in April.

    Protesters are bitterly opposed to the new law, which allows employers to end job contracts for under-26s at any time during a two-year trial period without having to offer an explanation or give prior warning.

    The government says it will encourage employers to hire young people, but students fear it will erode job stability in a country where more than 20% of 18 to 25-year-olds are unemployed.

    The demonstrations came after a series of mass protests by students in dozens of French universities, which have severely disrupted classes.

    Twenty-four people, including seven police officers, were injured in Saturday's violence, which lasted about six hours.

    Sorbonne rally

    The violence broke out at the eastern Place de la Nation as police attempted to disperse demonstrators following a mainly peaceful march through the capital involving students, workers, pensioners and families.

    Demonstrators hurled stones and bottles at officers, who eventually drove them back, charging the crowd and using tear gas grenades.

    Several cars were set on fire and nearby shop windows smashed.

    About 500 students then marched on Paris' Sorbonne university in the Latin Quarter, chanting: "Liberate the Sorbonne."

    Job security threat

    Clashes also erupted in other cities, including the port of Marseille, where demonstrators tried to set fire to the entrance to the town hall. One officer was injured and six youths were arrested, police said.

    Mr de Villepin proposed the CPE law as part of a series of measures designed to help youths in the French suburbs who took to the streets last year.

    The BBC's Caroline Wyatt in Paris says the protests have gained their own momentum, turning into the worst crisis that Mr de Villepin has had to face since taking office last year.

    The contracts have been seen by students and many on the left as an attack on job security at a time when many in France are feeling deeply threatened by globalisation and any hint of change at home.

  2. #2
    Partridge Guest
    Coma case fuels France jobs anger
    BBC


    A row has erupted in France over a demonstrator who fell into a coma when protests against a new youth employment law turned violent on Saturday.

    The SUD PTT union said Cyril Ferez, 39, was trampled underfoot during a police charge at Place de la Nation in Paris.

    But a paramedic from the CRS riot police said Mr Ferez had told him on the way to hospital that he had been attacked by other demonstrators. [Partridge: Yeah right! Just like Mumia Abu Jamal 'admitted' his guilt to the paramedics!]

    Mr Ferez had been "semi-conscious, with multiple facial bruising," he said.

    Mr Ferez belongs to the SUD PTT union, which has accused the government of "trying to cover up a police blunder," the French news agency AFP reports.

    SUD PTT said police had "refused to call for first aid as Cyril was lying on the ground".

    Paris violence

    On Saturday hundreds of thousands across France took part in marches and rallies against the law, which makes it easier to dismiss young workers.

    Clashes erupted in Paris late on Saturday, with masked demonstrators hurling projectiles at police and setting cars ablaze. Police responded with baton charges and tear gas.

    French unions and students have decided to step up their campaign against the new labour law by holding a day of strikes and protests on 28 March.

    The government insists it will not withdraw the measure, which it says will help reduce youth unemployment.

    The government says the plan will encourage employers to hire young people, but students fear it will erode job stability in a country where more than 20% of 18- to 25-year-olds are unemployed.

  3. #3
    PhilosophyGenius Guest
    I bet one of the reasons this never happens here is because this country is so damn big with so many people that most (including myself) feel that you're voice wont be heard.

    And love the French all the time!

  4. #4
    Partridge Guest
    I bet one of the reasons this never happens here is because this country is so damn big with so many people that most (including myself) feel that you're voice wont be heard.
    I think it never happens because the US Labor Movement has been systematically destroyed - first in the wake of the Russian Revolution (the first Red Scare), then the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 followed 'McCarthyism' (of course McCarthyism wasn't just about about 'Commies' in high places, it was used to scaremonger and blacklist anyone professing 'un-American' values such as trade union militancy, labor solidarity, wealth distribution etc), then COINTELPRO, and if you read the article I posted a cpuple of days ago called 'Bush's War on Working America' you can see what they've been doing more recently.

    France on the other hand, has always had a very strong Labour Movement and very strong Communist, Socialist and Trotskyist parties (especially after WWII, when the French (and Italian) CPs were the biggest outside of the USSR - due to their leading roles in the Resistance).

    Of course on the downside, France also has resurgent neo-fascist right (The National Party) who's candidate came second in the last Presidental election.

  5. #5
    PhilosophyGenius Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Partridge
    I think it never happens because the US Labor Movement has been systematically destroyed - first in the wake of the Russian Revolution (the first Red Scare), then the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 followed 'McCarthyism' (of course McCarthyism wasn't just about about 'Commies' in high places, it was used to scaremonger and blacklist anyone professing 'un-American' values such as trade union militancy, labor solidarity, wealth distribution etc), then COINTELPRO, and if you read the article I posted a cpuple of days ago called 'Bush's War on Working America' you can see what they've been doing more recently.

    France on the other hand, has always had a very strong Labour Movement and very strong Communist, Socialist and Trotskyist parties (especially after WWII, when the French (and Italian) CPs were the biggest outside of the USSR - due to their leading roles in the Resistance).

    Of course on the downside, France also has resurgent neo-fascist right (The National Party) who's candidate came second in the last Presidental election.
    Uhhhh, what you said.

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