1st
since Notre Dame fire: Yellow Vests back in action despite ‘unifying’
disaster & they are angry
RT,
20
April, 2019
Yellow
Vests protests brought clashes and tear gas back to the streets of
Paris, despite politicians’ calls for “unity” in the wake of
the Notre Dame fire. For protesters, the response to the fire only
showed more inequality.
Saturday’s
protests mark the 23rd straight weekend of anti-government
demonstrations, but the first since Notre Dame de Paris went up in
flames on Monday. Officials were quick to criticize the protesters
for returning to the streets so soon after the disaster.
“The rioters will be back tomorrow,” Interior Minister Christophe Castaner told reporters on Friday. “The rioters have visibly not been moved by what happened at Notre-Dame.”
For
many of the protesters, grief over the destruction of the
800-year-old landmark has made way for anger. With smoke still rising
from Notre Dame, a group of French tycoons and businessmen pledged €1
billion to the cathedral’s reconstruction, money that the Yellow
Vests say could be better spent elsewhere.
“If
they can give dozens of millions to rebuild Notre Dame, they should
stop telling us there is no money to respond to the social
emergency,” trade
union leader Philippe Martinez told France 24.
Saturday’s protests saw a return to scenes familiar since the Yellow Vests first mobilized in November to protest a fuel tax hike. Demonstrators in Paris’ Bastille district set barricades on fire and smashed vehicles, and police deployed tear gas to keep the crowds at bay.'
Some 60,000 police officers were deployed across the country, while a security perimeter was set up around Notre Dame in Paris. A planned march that would have passed the site was banned by the authorities, but sporadic incidents of vandalism and looting took place across the city, with at least one car torched.
There
were also clashes between protesters and gendarmerie in the capital.
The police used tear gas and water cannon to disperse the crowd,
arresting 189 people, according to France Info.
Grosses tensions en cours à Paris Boulevard Richard Lenoir. #GiletsJaunes #Acte23 #ActeXXIII #20Avril #YellowVests #Paris
Beginning as a show of anger against rising fuel costs in November, the Yellow Vests movement quickly evolved into a national demonstration of rage against falling living standards, income inequality, and the perceived elitism and pro-corporation policies of President Emmanuel Macron. Over 23 weeks of unrest, Macron has made several concessions to the protesters’ demands, but has thus far been unable to quell the rising dissent.
After
Notre Dame caught fire on Monday, the president postponed a
television address to the nation, during which he was expected to
unveil a package of tax cuts and other economic reforms, another
measure to calm the popular anger in France.
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