France braced for another day of street rallies against pension reform yesterday as rolling strikes cut the fuel pipeline to Paris airports and shut down most of the country’s oil refineries.
High-school students have increasingly joined the protests against French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s plan to raise the minimum retirement age from 60 to 62, with riot police firing tear gas and arresting more than 200 at student rallies on Friday.
French Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux told police to “limit the use of force to what is strictly necessary” when dealing with the students ahead of yesterday’s protests, the fifth in less than six weeks.
Unions want to pummel the government into backing down on its pension reform plans, staging strikes on weekdays and mass demonstrations in cities at the weekend. More than 230 rallies were planned for yesterday, the CGT union said.
The strikes have shut down 10 out of France’s 12 oil refineries, despite riot police being dispatched to keep the fuel flowing amid reports of panic buying. Fuel could run out at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport as early as tomorrow.
The government has given oil companies permission to tap into their own emergency stocks, but has resisted calls to open the part of the French strategic fuel reserve controlled by a government committee.
Lack of supply forced the shutdown of the fuel pipeline to Paris’s two main airports as well as depots outside the capital.
The main Paris hub, Roissy Charles de Gaulle, had enough aviation fuel to last until tomorrow evening or Tuesday, a transport ministry spokesman said, with planes reportedly being told to arrive with enough fuel for the return journey.
“We have ways of finding a solution to supply the airport. We’re confident,” the spokesman said, asking not to be named. “The pipeline supplying fuel to [Paris’ other main airport] Orly and Roissy airport is working intermittently.”
The head of the French Oil Industry Association (UFIP), Jean-Louis Schilansky, said earlier that with 10 refineries shut down by strikes protesting government pension reform plans, the situation was “tense.”
“The pipeline supplying fuel to Orly and Roissy airports -continues to function and we’re working, through different means, to find products to put into the pipeline, notably aviation fuel,” Schilansky said.
With French truck drivers set to join protests over the weekend, road transport bosses’ association OTRE called on drivers not to use company vehicles to push their demands by blocking roads and roundabouts.
“While striking and demonstrating are individual rights, taking property belonging to the business hostage in order to do so is unacceptable and indefensible,” the OTRE said.
National railway operator SNCF said that on average two out of three high-speed TGV trains would be running in and out of Paris, although only one TGV in four will run outside the capital.
The Paris metro will be running normally, with operator RATP saying that only five percent of its workers were on strike on Friday.
Because of a Belgian railway workers’ strike over deadlocked negotiations, all high-speed Thalys trains between Paris and Brussels were to be cancelled. Eurostar trains traveling under the Channel would be unaffected.
Unions and the Socialist opposition have vowed to defend the right to retire at 60. They accuse Sarkozy of making workers carry the burden for the failure of the financial sector and have proposed increasing taxes on the rich.
A nationwide day of strikes and demonstrations last Tuesday brought more than 1 million people to the streets and workers in some sectors have kept up their stoppages since then. Another mass strike is planned for Tuesday.
Despite the ongoing strikes and protests, the government showed no sign of retreating from what is a cornerstone of Sarkozy’s reform agenda as he prepares for his likely re-election battle in 2012.
Key sections of the reform have been passed by the upper house Senate and the government hopes for it to be passed in its entirety by the end of the month.
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