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| A yellow vest protester at one of the March protests in Montpellier, southern France AFP/File |
Paris (AFP) - "Yellow vest" protesters gathered in Paris and other French cities Saturday for the 26th straight week of rallies against President Emmanuel Macron, with scattered incidents of violence but overall a marked decline in the size of the crowds.
Several
hundred people began marching near the Jussieu university in the centre of the
capital, chosen to show solidarity with teachers who went on strike this week
against an education reform project.
"It's
going to be a day in support of parents, families and everyone in the education
system," Jean-Christophe Valentin, a city hall worker at the rally, told
AFP.
With
protests outlawed on the Champs-Elysees and a large part of central Paris,
organisers had called for "national" rallies in the cities of Lyon
and Nantes.
Around
2,000 to 3,000 people turned out in both cities, AFP journalists estimated,
confirming the decline in attendance since the protests began in November, when
it hit a high of 282,000 across France.
The
interior ministry, for its part, estimated just 2,700 protesters had turned out
across France as of 2:00 pm (1200 GMT), including 600 in Paris, compared with
3,600 counted at the same time last Saturday.
Tensions
flared in Nantes when police charged a group of people throwing rocks and other
objects, with at least one person evacuated by "street medics" among
the protesters.
Officials
had said they were expecting up to 500 far-left agitators in the city near
France's western Atlantic coast, rekindling fears of fresh violence by
so-called "black blocs".
A video
reporter for CNews in Nantes was injured after being hit by a rubber bullet
while filming the skirmish. "I'm fine because my support belt softened the
impact," Stephane Perrier told AFP.
In both
Lyon and Nantes, police used tear gas to disperse crowds as some masked
protesters attempted to build makeshift barricades.
'Fatigue'
The
Saturday protests have often been marred by rioting and clashes with police,
prompting a crackdown that critics say has led to a disproportionate use of
violence by security forces.
Several
videos taken by bystanders in recent weeks, including one showing an officer
hurling a paving stone toward demonstrators at a May Day rally, have prompted
inquiries by police investigators.
"There's
a bit of fatigue along with the fear of police violence," said Thierry
Boirivant, a 44-year-old accountant who travelled to Paris from the Lyon
region.
"And
then there's the economic factor: it's expensive to go protest in Paris or
other cities," he said.
Initially
launched over fuel tax increases, the movement quickly snowballed into a
widespread revolt against Macron, accused of ignoring the day-to-day struggles
of low earners in small-town and rural France.
Several
protesters are planning to run the European Parliament elections later this
month, hoping to turn their movement into a sustained political force.
"I'm
calling on Europeans to make an anti-Macron vote, even if he just finishes in
second place, it would take him down a notch, bring him back down to earth so
he can serve us instead of the rich," Jerome Rodrigues said in Lyon.
Rodrigues
has emerged as one of the government's fiercest critics. He was already a
well-known figure in the yellow vest movement when he was hit by a rubber
bullet during one of the January protests and lost an eye.
"If he
doesn't want to listen to us, we will keep up until he hears us, even if it
means ruining his term" as president," he said.
In April,
Macron unveiled nearly 17 billion euros ($19 billion) in wage boosts and tax
cuts for low earners to quell the protests, and vowed to better address voters'
grievances after months of town-hall debates.

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