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Protests and Riots in France

Discuss about the world's headlines

Protests and Riots in France

PostAuthor: heval » Tue Mar 28, 2006 9:48 pm

I thought it would be interesting to see input from the members of this forum knowing that some live or are from France. What is going on over there? .. there has been a lot of civil unrest recently... Big protests by the youth? What are your thoughts regarding this?

Reminds me of the youth protests in Kurdistan :lol:


Strike sweeps France over youth job contract
At least a million take to streets; some violence reported in Paris
MSNBC / Reuters

PARIS - At least 1 million people marched in French cities and unions staged a one-day national strike on Tuesday, urging the government to scrap a youth jobs law in one of France’s biggest protests in decades.

Unions and student groups said 3 million people took part in rallies across the country, including 700,000 in central Paris, where police used tear gas against hundreds of youths who threw bottles and Molotov cocktail petrol bombs.

One union official said demonstrations against Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin’s CPE First Job Contract were among the biggest since the Fifth Republic was founded in 1958.

The Interior Ministry put the national turnout at 1,055,000, twice that of a day of action a week ago. Unions and police habitually give widely diverging estimates.

Union and student leaders say the CPE will create a generation of “throwaway workers” by making it easier to dismiss employees under 26 during a two-year trial period. Villepin hopes it will reduce youth unemployment of almost 23 percent.

“We’re demanding the complete withdrawal of the CPE. You can’t treat people like slaves. Giving all the power to the bosses is going too far,” said Gregoire de Oliviera, a 21-year-old student protesting in Paris.

Villepin, 52, has stood firm over the plan but the strong turnout increased pressure on him to amend or withdraw the measure and calls for his resignation grew. He made a new call for talks with unions, but they rejected his appeal.

Eiffel Tower closed to tourists
The protests forced the Eiffel Tower to close to tourists, while commuters around the country faced delays on public transport and airports were disrupted.

“The problem is we are studying just to be exploited. The government must withdraw the CPE. We will continue to protest on the streets,” said Laura Dali, an 18-year-old student in Paris.

Isolated skirmishes hit marches in provincial cities and Paris, where police fired paintballs to mark troublemakers and 245 people were arrested. A water cannon was later used to quell protesters throwing missiles, but the Paris clashes were smaller than after protests last week.

Villepin, a potential candidate in next year’s presidential election, faces his biggest challenge since becoming prime minister last May. Opinion polls show almost two-thirds of French people oppose the CPE.

Business leaders also fear France’s image will be damaged if protests continue and that investment and tourism could suffer, particularly because the crisis has erupted so soon after rioting by angry youths in city suburbs late last year.

Unions spurn Villepin meeting
Unions refused to meet Villepin for talks on Wednesday but he renewed the invitation, offering to compromise on the length of the trial period and the terms for giving notice.

“Useful time remains, let’s use it for dialogue. But there is one thing that I will not accept ... that is to remain with my arms folded given youth unemployment about which you have never spoken before,” he told jeering opposition deputies.

Villepin also faces pressure from inside the ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) headed by Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, a likely rival for the 2007 presidential race.

The UMP parliamentary group on Tuesday backed Sarkozy’s proposal that the government not rush to enforce the law and so leave the door open for further negotiations.

President Jacques Chirac, who has backed Villepin during the crisis, cancelled a trip to northern France planned for Thursday because of the situation, sources close to the president said.

Socialist Party leader Francois Hollande warned Chirac and the government against “running the risk of confrontation with a majority of the country”.

Pictures at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12045529/

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Protests and Riots in France

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PostAuthor: Piling » Wed Mar 29, 2006 2:37 pm

Well it is an economical issue, and I have never any real opinion concenring that difficult topic... Now it is not only youths, protests are spreading to State workers, etc. It is a general contest of the current government too, but not so extraordinary events in france, it happens often. :lol:
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PostAuthor: abdur » Wed Mar 29, 2006 7:41 pm

I've heard that in France when you get a job right now it's not so easy to get fired afterwards. In Holland they work with temporary contracts for a year which can be extended 3 times till they have to give you a permanent contract. So in Holland the employers can easily hire people knowing that if they dont fit they wont extend the contract, in France they are kind of sticked to the employee.
Hence this youth job law, i think its a good law cause it will bring more employement. If you get fired anyway you should be able to find a new job easier than before. I understand the protests though...
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PostAuthor: Piling » Wed Mar 29, 2006 8:21 pm

That's right in France if you have a no-temporary job it is very difficult to fire you. For that reason, there are more and more temporary job (interim) or contracts for 6 months, 1 year, etc.

Then the CPE wanted to make a more "flexible" contract. But some people say that companies will abuse of that to exerce pressure on young employers (to accept bad condition of work, extra hours, etc) and at the contrary fire them. So it is a dilemna. In fact each solution have its bad aspects. The fact is that unemployment is a serious problem in France, for youth as others.
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PostAuthor: tomjez » Thu Mar 30, 2006 8:50 pm

I've heard that in France when you get a job right now it's not so easy to get fired afterwards.


Yeah well you don't get a job anymore. You get at best little contracts, not enough to rent a flat or reimburse the loans you made for your studies...

I chose not even to look for jobs in France and to live abroad, best idea I got so far!
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PostAuthor: Dilsad » Sat Apr 29, 2006 6:47 pm

I have been out of France for several years now...
I miss TONS of things (life style) but on the other hand ther are TONS OF THINGS that I do not miss (very up in your face Racism)...

Anyways, I am glad the students and youth came down so hard in the streets. THe truth is that there are ways to "fire" an employee, just like in Holland where you simply do not renew their contracts.

This law has nothing to do in my opinion with the "youth" only. It was written to start a process of chipping away the labor laws and protection in France.
So you start with the youth who are not really apart of any union yet...
Then you go to the elderly, and then to the ones in the middle...
This law would have done as much for creating jobs as the 35hours week did...I think it was a great ide, because people can get to enjoy their lives, but it didn't create any new jobs...


........
Interesting thing...there are immigration reform law being written right now in France, and those demonstrations only got a few thousand people...
Just to get back to my earlier point, adn the things I do not miss from France...
........


Dilsad...

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