France Link

French socialists call off conference amid fears of violent protests

Party boss Jean-Christophe Cambadélis said militants were threatening to attack party members in Nantes where conference was due to be held.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Paris France’s governing Socialist Party has taken the exceptional step of calling off its annual conference amid fears of violent protests by opponents of plans to reform labour laws, reports The Telegraph.

Jean-Christophe Cambadélis, first secretary of the party, told France 3 television yesterday (Sun) that militants were threatening to attack party members in the western city of Nantes, where the conference was to have been held next month.

“We were being threatened with violence against our activists, there were threats to wreck the whole city,” Mr Cambadélis said. “We will discuss another date when things can be done with more calm.”

France has suffered five months of strikes and protests against proposed reforms to make hiring and firing easier and relax the 35-hour working week, which have often degenerated into ugly clashes with police. Troublemakers, known as “casseurs”, have pelted police with stones and set fire to cars.

In an incident that caused public outrage, protesters smashed up the front of a children’s hospital in Paris where doctors were caring for the four-year-old son of a police couple murdered by a terrorist last month.

The government has called for a halt to the protests, but the hardline leader of the Left-wing CGT union, Philippe Martinez, insists they will continue until the government backs down.

Employers’ groups, however, say the labour bill has already been watered down to such an extent that it will fail to achieve its aim of spurring the creation of desperately needed jobs.

Read more of this report from The Telegraph.