Unions have been organizing protest marches for months against a
draft law that will overhaul labor rules. They said a ban on marching
would be unacceptable and that they would maintain plans to walk through
the streets of the French capital on Thursday.
French govt, unions, clash over right to march vs risk of violence
French authorities on Monday asked unions to scrap plans for a protest march in Paris
and limit their demonstrations to a single, static rally in hope that
the violence which marred previous days of action can be avoided.
Unions
have been organizing protest marches for months against a draft law
that will overhaul labor rules. They said a ban on marching would be
unacceptable and that they would maintain plans to walk through the
streets of the French capital on Thursday.
The government has the right to ban the protest rally if unions do not comply with its demands.
Tension between the government and unions that oppose the reform, including the hardline CGT, rose sharply after an escalation in violence during a street march in Paris last week.
Hundreds
of rioters ransacked shop fronts, clashed with police, tore up street
paving and smashed the windows of a children's hospital during running
battles on Tuesday. The police responded with teargas and water cannon
and dozens were hurt on both sides.
"In this context of tension and recent clashes ... having another march like that on June 23 is not conceivable," Interior Minister Bernard Cazenove said in a letter to CDT chief Philippe Martinez.
A
Paris police chief had made a similar comment earlier on Monday, but
two top union officials told Reuters they would stick to their plans.
Unions say the violent acts are committed by people not connected with their movement.
"I don't see what could push us to give up our constitutional right to protest," Pascal Joly, the head of the CGT in the Paris region, told Reuters.
Rallying in one square instead of doing a protest march "is not acceptable," said Gabriel Gaudy, a top official for smaller union FO.
French police are already stretched as France hosts the Euro 2016 soccer tournament under a state of emergency in place since Islamist attackers killed 130 people last November.
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