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Clashes mar latest Paris ‘yellow vest’ protest as hundreds are arrested

UPDATED: Armoured vehicles rolled through central Paris on Saturday as riot police clashed with "yellow vest" demonstrators, who set fire to barricades and hurled rocks in the latest demonstrations against President Emmanuel Macron.

Clashes mar latest Paris 'yellow vest' protest as hundreds are arrested
Photos AFP

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LATEST news

  • Clashes continue in streets around Champs-Elysees
  • Riot try to disperse rioters with tear gas
  • Over 600 people arrested 
  • Yellow vests try to block Paris motorway
  • Many yellow vests protest peacefully on Champs Elysees

Here is the latest round-up from AFP

Armoured vehicles rolled through central Paris  on Saturday as riot police clashed with “yellow vest” demonstrators, who set fire to barricades and hurled rocks in the latest demonstrations against President Emmanuel Macron.

Shouts of “Macron, resign” mingled with tear gas on the Champs-Elysees avenue, which was the scene of the worst rioting in Paris in decades last week.

Thick plumes of black smoke from fires could be seen rising high into the sky over the city.

Government calls for protesters to stay away from “Act IV” of a battle that began over fuel prices but ballooned into an anti-Macron revolt fell on deaf ears, with demonstrators making their way to Paris from across the country.

In the Grands Boulevards shopping district, masked protesters threw rocks at riot police and set fire to a barricade hastily assembled from stolen dustbins and Christmas trees.

Denis, a 30-year-old forklift driver from the Normandy port of Caen, travelled to Paris for the first time Saturday to make his voice heard after three weeks at the barricades in the provinces.

“I'm here for my 15-month-old son. I can't let him live in a country where the poor are exploited,” he told AFP. 

The demonstrators began blockading roads over rising fuel taxes on November  17 but their list of demands have since grown, with many calling for the resignation of Macron, whom they accuse of favouring the rich.

Coordinated “yellow vest” protests were taking place across the country on Saturday, including on numerous motorways, causing havoc on the national road 
network.

Deputy interior minister Laurent Nunez said an estimated 31,000 people were  taking part in protests nationwide, including 8,000 in Paris — similar numbers to last week. 

Around 700 people had been detained, most of them in Paris. 

Police carried out checks on people arriving at the capital's train stations, confiscating items that could be used as projectiles as well as surgical masks and goggles used to protect against the effects of tear gas.

Some of those arrested were carrying hammers, slingshots and rocks.

But many of the demonstrators insisted they wanted no violence.

Parts of the city centre were on effective lockdown, with shops, museums, the Eiffel Tower and many metro stations closed. Top-flight football matches and concerts were cancelled.

Last weekend's violence, which saw some 200 cars torched and the Arc de Triomphe vandalised, shook France and plunged Macron's government into its deepest crisis so far.

“These past three weeks have produced a monster that its creators no longer control,” Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said Friday, vowing “zero  tolerance” towards those aiming to wreak further destruction.

'We await Mr Macron'

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe on Friday evening met a delegation of self-described “moderate” yellow vests who urged people not to join the protests.

A spokesman from the movement, Christophe Chalencon, said Philippe had “listened to us and promised to take our demands to the president”.

“Now we await Mr Macron. I hope he will speak to the people of France as a father, with love and respect and that he will take strong decisions,” he said.

Philippe said some 89,000 police had been mobilised across France on Saturday, including 8,000 police in Paris, where a dozen armoured vehicles were being deployed for the first time in decades.

Shops around the Champs-Elysees boarded up their windows and emptied them of merchandise on Friday, while the Louvre, Musee d'Orsay and other museums were shut.

Department stores were also closed due to the risk of looting on what would normally be a busy shopping weekend in the run-up to Christmas.

Foreign governments are watching developments closely in one of the world's most visited cities. 

The US embassy issued a warning to Americans in Paris to “keep a low profile and avoid crowds”, while Belgium, Portugal and the Czech Republic advised citizens to postpone any planned visits.

 

2.30pm – Shops windows smashed on the Champs-Elysees

Some demonstrators have started ripping off the wooden planks used to board up shops along the iconic avenue, including the Drugstore Publicis, which was looted and vandalised during France's World Cup win celebrations.

The boards are being used as a barricade in the middle of the avenue, BFMTV reported. Several fires have also been lit.

A phone shop is also being looted. Police respond with tear gas as firefighters try to put out the flames.  

2.15pm – Trump tweets about Paris protests

A typically smug response by US President Donald Trump to events in Paris.  

 

1.45pm – Violence kicks off on Paris's Grands Boulevards

Violence is erupting on the capital's Grands Boulevards, with police using water cannons as well as tear gas to repel the most disruptive protesters.
 
The Local France's Ben McPartland says members of the Black Boc anti-capitalist movement are causing most of the trouble. Armoured vehicles are now on the move.
 
 
 

1.30pm – 575 arrests but no major incidents 

Paris police have announced that 575 arrests had been made so far this Saturday in the capital. 361 of the detainees have been taken into custody.

Despite some tensions and violent clashes on the Champs-Elysees, as well as yellow vest attempts to block the Porte Maillot dual carriageway, no major incident has yet been reported in the capital.

 Roughly 31,000 yellow vests have taken to the streets of French cities this Saturday, according to figures provided by the Ministry of the Interior on France 2.

In Paris the number of protesters has reached 8,000. 

12.40pm – “Tensions keep rising and falling”

The Local's Ben McPartland, who has been on Champs-Elysees all morning, said: “For the most part its been fairly calm except for a flashpoint towards the top of the avenue.

“There have been volleys of tear gas thrown to push protesters back and missiles thrown at police by a minority of protesters.

“Tensions have been rising and falling and they could rise again throughout the day.

“Most protesters are standing and talking and have told me about familiar grievances: Taxes that leave them without enough money at the end of the month. A president who only cares about the rich and treats the lower class like idiots.

“They say they aren't just moaning French people demanding more and more, instead they argue that they're fighting for their country and their rights.

“Most of those who've come are from outside Paris or from the suburbs of the capital. They sing the national anthem and chant for Macron to resign.”

12 noon – Yellow vest leader arrested in Grenoble, more arrests in Paris

Grenoble's yellow vest leader Julien Terrier has been arrested in his city for organising an unauthorised demo, according to the prefecture of Isère. Some fifteen other people have also been arrested in Grenoble. 

The number of arrests in Paris currently stands at 514, with 271 people remanded in custody. Police continue to use tear gas to disperse violent protesters. 

11.30am – 481 people arrested in Paris, 211 remanded in custody

French Interior Minister Edouard Philippe tells journalists that 481 people have so far been arrested and 211 have been remanded in custody as violence between the 'yellow vests' and police starts to take hold of Saturday's protests in Paris. 

By the same time during last Saturday's protest there had been 412 arrests.

11.15am – The Local asks 'yellow vests' why they are protesting

The Local France's Editor Ben McPartland asks ordinary French people why they've joined the gilets jaunes protest in Paris this Saturday. 

11am – Yellow vests trying to block traffic on Paris's Porte Maillot dual carriageway 

A group of yellow vests who were stopped from reaching Paris's Place de l'Etoile because they refused to take off their protective gear (helmets, masks and safety goggles) are now blocking traffic on the Parisian péripherique road. Police are in the process of dispersing the group. 

10.30am – Tear gas fired at yellow vests near the Champs-Elysees

Police have used tear gas for the first time this Saturday to disperse a crowd of yellow vests near the the Champs-Elysées. Arrests are now up to 354. 

10.15am – More gilets jaunes, more arrests 

The number of people detained by French police forces continues to rise. According to Le Parisien and BFMTV, the figure now stands at 343.

Approximately 1,000 people have now gathered in front of the security perimeter facing the Arc de Triomphe. 

9.30am – arrests rise to 320

According to French news channel BFMTV, the total number of arrests has risen to 320. Only six arrests had been carried out by the same time last Saturday, suggesting French police have changed their tactics. 

The Local France's Editor Ben McPartland is reporting live from the Champs-Élysées:

Thirty-two people have been remanded in custody. 

Despite the 8,000 police officers deployed in central Paris, hundreds of yellow vests have already descended on the Champs-Élysées, chanting and carrying banners with slogans calling for Macron to resign. 

9am – 278 arrests made

Paris was on lockdown with major monuments and department stores shut and some 8,000 police on the streets following the worst rioting in the capital in decades last weekend.

Major security measures in place ahead of fresh “yellow vest” protests which authorities fear could turn violent for a second weekend in a row.

Shops, museums, metro stations and the Tour Eiffel were due to close, while  top-flight football matches and music shows were cancelled.

The French capital experienced its worst riots in decades last weekend, in scenes that shook the country and plunged President Emmanuel Macron's government into its deepest crisis so far.

France's interior minister Christophe Castaner said he expected “only a few  thousand people” to descend on the capital after the 8,000 protesters counted last weekend, “but among them are ultraviolent individuals”.

“These past three weeks have seen the birth of a monster that has escaped its creators,” he said, adding that a “large-scale” security operation would  be launched Saturday. 

He vowed “zero tolerance” towards those aiming to wreak further destruction and mayhem, after dozens of vehicles were torched, shops looted and the Arc de Triomphe war memorial was wrecked last Saturday.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe on Friday evening met a delegation of self-described “moderate” yellow vests who have urged people not to join the protests.

After the meeting a movement spokesman, Christophe Chalencon, said the premier had “listened to us and promised to take our demands to the president”.

“Now we await Mr Macron. I hope he will speak to the people of France as a father, with love and respect and that he will take strong decisions,” he said.

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France in crisis as country braces for more violence

Tensions were high in France on Friday as authorities and the public prepare for tomorrow's day of protests, with violence expected in Paris and other cities.

France in crisis as country braces for more violence
Photo: AFP

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Latest news on Friday

Scroll down for all the day's events

To read all the latest articles on the yellow vest protests and the impact on France and Paris in particular CLICK HERE.

'Gilets Jaunes libres' to meet the Prime Minister

A group of so-called gilets jaunes libres (free yellow vests) including Benjamin Cauchy, who has become an unofficial spokesman for the movement will meet French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe on Friday evening.

The group, who many gilets jaunes insist do not represent them, wanted to meet the president, but was apparently refused an audience. Emmanuel Macron is trying to stay out of the limelight for fear of inflaming the situation. 

Journalists given protection and protective gear

Journalists in France covering the protests tomorrow have been advised to wear protective gear and only take smartphones instead of cameras.

Several journalists have already been the subject of violence, notably in Toulouse and of abuse by a minority of protesters who claim the mainstream media is against them.

BFM TV have employed security guards to accompany every journalist who is out on the ground. They have been instructed to intervene if reporters are attacked.

Bordeaux also closes its Museums on Saturday

It's just Paris that is closing down its cultural sites. Authorities in Bordeaux, which has also seen outbreaks of violence in recent days has also announced it will close around 10 museums.

Updated advice for Britons in France from Foreign Office

The UK foreign office has updated its travel advice for Britons in France. This is what the latest information says.

“Protests against fuel prices linked to the yellow vest (gilets jaunes) movement continue across France, leading to blocked roads and motorways in some areas. Demonstrations are also planned in Paris on Saturday 8 December, which could be widespread and could cause extensive disruption.

“Recent demonstrations have led to violence and extensive damage to property. In preparation for Saturday’s expected demonstrations, which may again turn violent, the authorities have announced that a number of museums and tourist sites in central Paris will be closed. Shops on the Champs Elysées and surrounding streets, as well as some Metro (underground) stations, will also be closed.

“You should be aware that substantial numbers of police and gendarmerie officers will be present in central Paris to ensure security. 

“Outside Paris, related demonstrations are likely to occur in other towns and cities across the country. Motorists travelling through France may also experience delays or blockages caused by demonstrators at motorway toll booths. In all cases, you should avoid any demonstrations if at all possible and follow the advice of the local authorities.”

MP for Macron's party receives bullet in the post 

An MP for French President Emmanuel Macron's La Republique en Marche party received a bullet in the post on Friday. 
 
The MP for the northern Pas-de-Calais department Benoit Potterie said he received a bullet by post at his office and has filed a complaint. 
 
The bullet was accompanied by a handwritten message saying, “Next time you'll get it between the eyes”.
 
Number of cultural sites closing reaches 48

The list of famous Paris sites to close on Saturday continues to grow with the latest count being 48, including the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower and the Grand Palais.

Open top bus tours will not be running, many theatres will also close and the city's big department stores will also shut for the day;

Here's the latest list according to the City Hall.

 

The parts of Paris to avoid on Saturday

There are some places to avoid if you're going to be in Paris on Saturday.

It's best to steer clear of the Champs-Elysees and the wide surrounding area, stretching towards the department stores on the Boulevard Haussmann, the area around Opera and Place de la Concorde should also probably be avoided, given there was widespread rioting there last weekend.

gilets jaunes march is also scheduled to take place between Bastille and Republique in the east of the city.
 
A total of 14 areas will be under tight police surveillance, such as Place de l'Etoile at the Arc de Triomphe, Concorde, Place Vendome, Opera, Montparnasse and Place d'Italie.
 
Other parts of the city may also be worth avoiding as the day's developments unfold so remember to stay up to date with the news and check @ParisJeTaime for updates throughout the day. 
 
Here's a map from BFM TV which highlights the areas, according to them, that you might want to avoid.
 
 

Facebook groups — the nerve centre of the “yellow vest” protest movement 

With names like “Angry Drivers of Normandy”, Facebook groups are the nerve centre of the “yellow vest” protest movement raging across France — and increasingly, a breeding ground for fake news.
 
When Facebook's CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced in January that the social media giant was going to start prioritising local news, little did he know it would end up feeding the worst crisis of Emmanuel Macron's presidency.
   
Internet experts say changes to Facebook's algorithms have helped “anger groups” like that in Normandy swell to tens of thousands of members — and last month, they spilled onto the streets.
   
November 17 marked the start of nationwide road blockades against rising fuel prices, which have since ballooned into a mass movement against rising living costs and Macron in general.
 
With thousands of posts railing against everyone from the president to a shadowy global financial cabal, the groups reflect the leaderless nature of the yellow vests, who subscribe to a variety of different goals.
 
 
Paris residents prepare for the worst

Residents living around the upmarket Champs-Elysees area of Paris spoke to The Local about their worries as protesters gear up to hit the French capital once again on Saturday, with the government fearing a repeat of last weekend's violence.

“Of course I'm scared about what will happen tomorrow and I'm not planning to leave the house,” Isabelle Rochas told The Local

“At the beginning I was in favour of the gilets jaunes and what they were trying to do but since last week it seems to have degenerated into a movement of people whose goal is to destroy everything,” said Rochas.
 
“The problem is people keep talking about these casseurs (hard core rioters) but I think some of the yellow vests who were originally reasonable and fairly mild have been swept up in the violence because they think it's the only way they can get what they want.” 
 
Some residents have decided that they are not taking any risks this weekend and are taking measures such as leaving for the weekend or moving their cars. 
 
“I'm not staying around to see how bad it gets,” one resident who did not want to be named told The Local. “These people shouldn't be able to stop others living their lives the way they want to.”
 
 
French government releases video to appeal to rioters

The French government has sent out a video on Twitter to appeal to protesters not to resort to violence.

“Demonstrating is not smashing things up,” reads the text on the video.

Galeries Lafayette and Printemps to close on Saturday

Grands magasins Galeries Lafayette and Printemps on Boulevard Haussmann will be closed on Saturday, according to reports in the French press

The department stores will be closed as a “precaution” as a result of the exceptional circumstances. 
 
“People's safety – both customers and employees – is the absolute and daily priority of the Galeries Lafayette Group throughout the year,” Galeries Lafayette said (see tweet below). 
 
BHV in the Marais and the Montparnasse branch of Galeries Lafayette will also be closed. 
 
 
France's rights watchdog opens probe into arrest of school pupils

One story that has caused widespread outrage on Friday is the arrest of 150 school pupils in Mantes-la-Jolie to the north west of Paris. The pupils were pictured on their knees surrounded by riot police with their hands on their heads (see link below).

France's rights watchdog the Defenseur des Droits has opened an investigation into the manner of the arrests.

Videos of French high-school pupils forced to kneel by police causes outcry

 

Where to avoid in Paris on Saturday?

Readers have been asking us if we can point out the places to avoid in Paris tomorrow.

This is not easy because as we saw last week the protest was meant to take place on the Champs Elysées but quickly descended into mayhem in the streets round the Arc de Triomphe, before spreading in the evening throughout the 8th arrondissement.

In the end only a section of the city was affected but the point is that is last week is anything to go by the its hard to predict what will happen. We've seen in previous demos where a violent fringe has turned up that they have ended in cat and mouse chases with police.

For example during the demos against labour law reforms anarchist and left-wing extremist groups break off from the main crowd and carry out destruction away from the watching police but in front of bemused members of the public. By the time the police were on the scene the damage was done and the rioters had moved off.

Nevertheless there are some areas to avid on Saturday, not least the Champs-Elysees and the wide surrounding area, stretching towards the department stores on the Boulevard Haussmann. A  gilet jaunes march is also scheduled to take place between Bastille and Republique in the east of the city.

But many other areas on the Right Bank may also feel like ghost towns given shop owners are likely to take the decision to close.

Here's a map from BFM TV which highlights the areas, according to them, that you might want to avoid.

CGT truckers union also calls off strike

A big sigh of relief as just passed through the Elysée Palace after the CGT union joined the FO in calling OFF its planned rolling strike from Sunday. That action could have caused havoc on the roads.

It was to do with overtime rates but was also in sympathy with the yellow vest movement.

“Gilets jaunes libres' call for people not to go to Paris

A group calling itself the gilets jaunes libres or 'free yellow vests' have just been giving a press conference; 

One of their spokespeople Benjamin Cauchy called for calm and for “respect for the forces of law and order”. He urged fellow “yellow vest” supporters not to head to Paris on Saturday to join the demonstration.

Cauchy also demanded talks with President Emmanuel Macron.

“We are ready for dialogue. We expect a political, tax and social electro-shock from the government,” he told media outside the French parliament.

“The government tries to make us out to be rioters, that's no the case.”

What's interesting is the amount of abuse directed towards Cauchy and fellow gilet jaune libre spokesperson Jacqueline Mouraud on Twitter. Many insist they don't represent the gilet jaune movement.

Molotov cocktails seized 

AFP has just tweeted that 28 molotov cocktails otherwise known as petrol bombs were seized at a roundabout in Montauban near Toulouse, as well as three homemade bombs.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo gives details of how Paris will be affected on Saturday

The mayor of Paris has been given details about how the city will be in lockdown tomorrow. She calls for calm as you'd expect and for people to “take care of Paris”.

Velib bicycle stations and public buildings will be closed as well as numerous museums ad tourist sites such as the Eiffel Tower.

Hidalgo said it was with immense sadness that Paris will practically “come to a halt” but she said that security and safety were the main priorities. 

The mayor said that hundreds of workers had been on duty throughout the week clearing “urban furniture” in other words barriers and bollards that can be used as weapons.

Some nine street markets across the capital that are normally open on a Saturday will not take place this weekend. Anyone who wants up to date information on the latest closures can visit www.Paris.fr

 

Where is President Emmanuel Macron throughout all this?

The French president has been notable by his absence in recent days. In fact he has hardly be seen at all apart from when he was jeered and heckled on a visit to a prefecture that was set ablaze by protesters last Saturday.

Macron, perhaps understandably given he has become the central figure of hate among yellow vest protesters, has thought it better to lie low and avoid “pouring oil on the fire”.

But one of the repeated complaints among yellow vest protesters is that they want to hear from their president. Many yellow vest protesters now believe his silence is a sign of disrespect and of how he holds them in contempt. Macron insists he accepts their anger.

The president can't win it seem. But we are told he will speak in some form after the weekend.

But who knows what might have happened by then.

 

 

 

Armored vehicles deployed in Paris

These armored vehicles (pictured below) will be ready to be deployed in Paris on Saturday. There will be 12 of them and apparently it will be up to the Prime Minister whether the police put them into action. 

They are rarely used in cities in France and were last used by gendarmes to evacuate the contested airport site Notre-Dame-des-Landes in western France, which saw fierce clashes with protesters.

Companies urged to hike wages by government

The French government appear to have realised this crisis is about far more than fuel taxes. The labour minister Muriel Penicaud held talks with bosses and unions on Friday and suggested that companies take the opportunity to boost workers' wages.

“Everyone can do something, so everyone must do something,” she said. But the minister stopped short of using the law to force businesses to boost wages accepting that would warm competitiveness. 

Police allowed to carry out extensive ID checks 

Paris prosecutor Remy Heitz said police in the city have been given the power to carry out stop and search checks at any “sensitive points” in the city in order to try to identify any individuals seeking to cause trouble.

Truckers union calls off strike

At least one conflict appears to have been resolved in the last few hours. One of the two truckers unions who called on lorry drivers to begin a rolling strike on Sunday evening has called off the action after talks held with employers and the government.

The FO union said it had received guarantees that overtime rates would be guaranteed. It's not yet clear whether the CGT union will push on with the strike.

Striking French truckers and farmers set to add to Macron's woes

 

Interior Minister speaks

France's Interior Minister Christophe Castaner has just given a press conference. He declined to give too many details of the security plan for Saturday in Paris for fearing of tipping off the rioters.

The minister confirmed that the government believes “radical elements” will mobilise on Saturday.

He did confirm the number of police to be deployed: 8,000 in the capital and 89,000 around France. Castaner again pleaded to peaceful gilets jaunes protesters: 

“I hear the anger, the government hears the anger. We have made concessions,” he said.

 

11:30 – Live blog

We've decided to launch a live blog to cover the day's news around the yellow vest movement and the planned protests on Saturday.  There is a lot going on in France right now and things are changing rapidly. We'll have live updates on everything that you need to know today so please keep checking in with us and refresh the page manually for updates.

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