Protests over spiraling French fuel prices leave 1 dead, dozens injured
Paris (CNN)A
protester was accidentally run over and killed by a car during a
demonstration over rising fuel prices, a top official in eastern France
said Saturday.
Mass
demonstrations causing roadblocks across the country are part of the
"gilets jaunes" or "yellow vests" movement, which opposes mounting gas prices and eco-taxes on polluting forms of transport.
The
death occurred when a female driver "panicked" and ran over someone
after arriving at a blockade for an undeclared protest not far from the
city of Lyon, Louis Laugier, the prefect of the Savoie region, said at a
news conference.
A further 106 people have been injured -- five severely -- in protests across the country, and 38 have been placed in custody, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.
Speaking
about the death, French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said:
"That's the reason why we were worried to have people (who are) not
experienced organizing protests."
Ecology
Minister François de Rugy called on citizens to "respect caution and
safety recommendations" in order for protests to go ahead "without a new
tragedy," in a tweet Saturday. He also offered his condolences to the
family of the victim.
More than 1
million people were expected to turn out Saturday for demonstrations
across the country. Partway through the day, the numbers were much lower
than that.
About 244,000 people participated in about 2,000 demonstrations, the Interior Ministry said.
"Honestly
we're satisfied, even if it's true we are not hundreds of thousands
people here, but still, people have come. The day is not over yet, and
we're glad that there are no incidents here," Thierry Paul Valette, who
helped organize a protest on the Champs Elysées in Paris, told CNN.
"We
can't stand Macron's taxes any more, it's too much. We couldn't make
ourselves heard through political parties or trade unions, so we had to
do something."
The protest was billed as likely to be one of the toughest tests yet of Emmanuel Macron's 18-month-old presidency.
Website blocage17novembre
said protests were planned in all 95 of France's mainland departments,
while a petition on change.org calling on the French government to lower
the cost of fuel has gotten more than 850,000 signatures.
In
addition to concerns over spiraling fuel prices, the protests also
reflect long-running tensions between the metropolitan elite and rural
poor.
Price hike
Diesel
prices have surged 16% this year from an average €1.24 ($1.41) per
liter to €1.48 ($1.69), even hitting €1.53 in October, according to
UFIP, France's oil industry federation.
The
price hike is largely caused by a leap in the wholesale price of oil,
with Brent Crude oil -- a benchmark for worldwide oil purchases --
increasing by more than 20% in the first half of 2018 from around $60 a
barrel to a peak of $86.07 in early October.
French
protesters are, however, not directing their anger at OPEC for reducing
oil production, or at the US administration for implementing tariffs on
Iran, crippling its oil exports.
Macron
is instead bearing the brunt of widespread French discontent, with many
protesters furious at the current leader's extension of environmental
policies implemented under François Hollande's government.
Notably,
taxes were increased by 8 centimes last January on diesel, and by 4
centimes on petrol. Tax on diesel will also increase by another 6.4
centimes in 2019, and by 2.9 centimes for petrol. These rises follow
many decades of under-taxation of diesel in France.
Macron criticized
The
growing resentment has also been a springboard for partisan political
attacks, with opponents of Macron's centrist En Marche party attempting
to energize their bases to fuel further revolt.
"This government hasn't understood the anger of the French," Olivier Faure, head of the French Socialist Party, said Wednesday.
"Macron
has not heard the French," Laurent Wauquiez, leader of the center-right
party Les Républicains, added in an interview for BFMTV and RMC radio.
Meanwhile,
Macron's former nemesis Marine Le Pen, leader of France's far-right
National Rally, said: "We were the first party to express our total
support for this movement."
Castaner hit back at Macron's opponents, branding the protests "political" and accusing Les Républicains of being behind them.
"It's
a political protest with the Republicans behind it, and it's irrational
because the rising taxes have been compensated by the decline in the
oil market," he told CNN's French affiliate BFM-TV. "We hear the
protests, we hear the anger, I know the situation, but we have to
explain that it's essential that we exit fossil fuels."
The
minister said police would be present to break up any dangerous
roadblocks. "I am asking for the roads to not be completely blocked,"
Castaner said. "Where there is a roadblock -- which means there's a risk
for emergency services -- there will be police."
Macron
struck a more conciliatory tone in an interview Wednesday, saying: "I
hear the anger, and it's a fundamental right in our society to be
allowed to express it."
He nevertheless admitted that he was "wary because many different people are trying to piggyback on this movement."
Prime
Minister Edouard Philippe also announced close to €500 million in aid
to low-income motorists in a key concession Wednesday.
Protests over spiraling French fuel prices leave 1 dead, dozens injured
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