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FRANCE: STRIKES

reposter | 15.06.2003 23:20


Strikes, Demonstrations, Occupations Against Government Plans

Workers in France have staged major strikes for the last three weeks affecting the transport, teachers, postal, sanitation and other public services. 1 million people demonstrated May 26 in response to a call for a general strike. The strikes have continued since then and street demonstations have grown more confrontational. The uprising is in response to the government's proposed restructuring of the public sector.

Proposed reforms to the pension system would increase the retirement age by forcing people to work 40 years or perhaps more to recieve a full pension. The current requirement 37.5 years. Other reforms include decentralising the public education system forcing the privatisation of many schools. University changes would increase privatision of france's tertiary education sector.

On June 10, 200,000 people marched to the National Assembly where the government was debating the reforms. The protest ended in confrontations between police and protestors with police using CS gas, stun grenades, water cannons and pepper spray again demonstrators. (Photos [ 1 | 2| 3.] 65 people were arrested, two have already recieved 4 months prison for allegedly throwing paving stones. People have been holding a solidarity demonstation outside the court.

Several offices of different universitities are currently being occupied [fr] and in Burgondy one group occupied the local state television station [it] interrupting the 1:00pm news and staying to prevent the 7:00pm broadcast. For direct reports in French see Paris Indymedia
 http://paris.indymedia.org/

 

reposter
- Homepage: http://paris.indymedia.org/

Comments

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Two errors

16.06.2003 04:45

"two have already recieved 4 months prison for allegedly throwing paving stones"
Two errors here: firstly, it's spelt "received"; secondly, the use of "allegedly" is incorrect, since they were presumably convicted of this offence.
If you want to be an "independent" "journalist" you'll have to be more careful - or people might just prefer to get their news from more professional sources.

Spell checker


so what?

16.06.2003 11:35

The important thing is whether a report is accurate and reliable, not whether the spelling is
100% correct. As for the use of 'allegedly', I'm sure we're all aware that the courts sometimes
convict innocent people, especially in such circumstances.

The reason people get their news here is because 'professional' sources are full of bias and
bullshit. No amount of perfect spelling makes up for that!

priority checker


Misrepresenting the facts

16.06.2003 17:18

"Proposed reforms to the pension system would increase the retirement age by forcing people to work 40 years or perhaps more to recieve a full pension. The current requirement 37.5 years."

Wow, what a complete misrepresentation.

Currently, in France, private sector workers need 40 years of service to get their full pensions. Public sector workers need only 37.5 years. The government plans to make things equal by forcing public sector workers to work the extra 2.5 years - the same as their private sector counterparts.

The above story implies that the work requirements are being raised for all workers (FALSE!) or that no one has to work 40 years right now (FALSE!).

Remember kids, don't remember everything you read. Indymedia is a biased source too.

chris

chris