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French teachers stage massive strike over Covid measures chaos

French teachers and other education workers staged a nationwide strike on Thursday, accompanied by street marches whih official figures said drew a turnout of 78,000, in protest at what they say are the government's too demanding and regularly changing anti-Covid measures to keep schools open. 

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

Huge numbers of French teachers went on strike Thursday, with the biggest teachers' union saying half of primary schools were closed as staff demand clarity from the government on coronavirus measures, reports FRANCE 24

Coming as France's presidential election campaign gets under way ahead of an April vote, the walkout is awkward for President Emmanuel Macron's government which has prided itself on keeping schools open to ease pressure on parents through the pandemic.

Tens of thousands also took to the streets, with the interior ministry saying almost 78,000 teachers and other education workers protested nationwide, including 8,200 in Paris alone.

While the education ministry said almost 40 percent of primary school teachers had walked out, top union Snuipp put the figure at 75 percent with one primary school in two closed for the day.

The strike "demonstrates the growing despair in schools", Snuipp said in a Tuesday statement announcing the strike.

They complain that their members are unable to teach properly, are not adequately protected against coronavirus infection and frequently hear about changes to health precautions via the media rather than from higher-ups.

"The government announces things, but no-one thinks about what it means for staff on the ground," Olivier Flipo, the head of a Paris school, told AFP this week.

"They're asking hellish things of us and it's all going to the dogs".

With many pupils off sick and difficulty combining distance learning with in-person classes, "it's not school that's open, but a kind of 'daycare'," Snuipp said.

Some parents AFP spoke to on the street backed the strike.

"I understand the teachers and their position... classes are too big, they don't get paid enough, their working conditions aren't the best," said Akim Aouchiche outside a northeast Paris school.

"It's their way of making themselves heard," said tax advisor Alexandra Stojek.

"I understand what they're asking for, it's justified, they're not doing this to bother us."   

"Until now, the public thought the government and President Emmanuel Macron had managed the crisis properly," Brice Teinturier of pollster Ipsos told AFP.

But if there is significant disruption from the strike, "that balance risks toppling", he added.

See more of this AFP article published, with video reports, by FRANCE 24.