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France stages May Day rallies a year after pensions backlash

A total of 265 rallies were held across the country, with Pro-Palestinian and anti-Olympics protesters swelling the ranks of many parades.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

France’s two main trade unions on Wednesday were once again united for May Day parades after last year’s politically charged march against the government’s unpopular pensions reform, reports RFI.

The CGT and CFDT walked side by side in processions in at least half of French cities, including Paris, under the scattered slogans of promoting peace, fighting austerity and calling for a “more protective Europe for workers” ahead of the EU’s elections in June. 

A total of 265 rallies were being held across the country.

Pro-Palestinian and anti-Olympics protesters swelled the ranks of many parades, while farmers complaining of excessive red tape with regards to environmental rules joined in. 

In Lyon, 22 people were arrested and two police officers injured after hooded individuals attacked a bank. Similar violence also broke out in the western city of Nantes.

Twenty-five people were arrested in Paris on the sidelines of the parade before it had even set off. 

Read more of this report from RFI.