Morning Star.png

 

 

Fight Against El Khomri Ramps Up

 

Strikes to stop hated labour laws spread across France

 

 

James Tweedie, The Morning Star, London, 27 May 2016

 

Mass strikes and protests continued to rock France yesterday as trade
unionists ramped up their campaign against hated new labour laws.

 

The communist-linked CGT union federation, France's largest, took to the
streets of cities across the country demanding the scrapping of the "El
Khomri Law," named after Labour Minister Myriam El Khomri.

 

Around 100 people broke away from the main Paris demonstration and clashed
with riot police who fired tear gas. Sixteen were arrested.

 

Meanwhile train drivers, air traffic controllers and nuclear power plant
workers joined the ongoing strikes at fuel refineries that have left petrol
pumps running dry across the country.

 

Protesters blocked roads and bridges, while unions called for rolling
strikes on the Paris Metro on the opening day of the Euro 2016 football
tournament on June 10.

 

Posters at a protest in the port of Le Havre bore a blood-red tombstone
representing the Act reading: "Not amendable, not negotiable: Withdraw the
El Khomri Law."

 

The law, imposed by the Socialist Party government as a decree after
parliament refused to pass it, lengthens the basic working week from 35 to
46 hours, cuts statutory redundancy payments while capping those made for
unfair dismissal and places new restrictions on trade union activity.

 

Pickets of petrol refineries continued despite heavyhanded policing and even
attacks by fellow citizens.

 

In Mediterranean coast town Fos-sur-Mer, a man was airlifted to hospital
after a motorist rammed a picket line outside a refinery.

 

Electricity generation was cut by some 4,000 megawatts - about 4 per cent of
national capacity - after workers at nine nuclear power plants joined the
strike on Wednesday night.

 

Ten more plants had voted to join the action. Cracks showed in the Socialist
Party government's stubborn defence of the law, with Finance Minister Michel
Sapin suggesting the most controversial clauses be rewritten.

 

Prime Minister Manuel Valls also said "There could be improvements and
modifications" to the legislation but insisted withdrawing it "is not
possible."

 

He said: "You cannot blockade a country, you cannot attack the economic
interests of France in this way."

 

 

From:
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-2d95-France-Fight-against-El-Khomri-ram
ps-up#.V0giNfl9601

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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