With most trains at a standstill, France braces for even more transportation strikes
President Emmanuel Macron convened top officials to strategize for high-stakes week
France braced for worsening transportation chaos when the new workweek begins Monday due to nationwide strikes over the government's redesign of the national retirement system. French President Emmanuel Macron convened top officials to strategize for the high-stakes week ahead.
Sunday saw more travel woes as the strikes entered their fourth day, with most French trains at a standstill. Fourteen of Paris's subway lines were closed, with only two lines — using automated trains with no drivers — functioning. International train routes also suffered disruptions.
Monday will be an even bigger test of the strike movement's strength and of commuters' and tourists' patience. Unions are calling for more people to join the strike Monday. Many employees worked from home or took a day off when the strikes began last week, but that's not sustainable if the strikes drag on.
Warning of safety risks, the SNCF national train network and the Paris transit authority RATP warned travellers to stay away from train stations Monday instead of packing platforms for the few trains still running.
"On Dec. 9, stay home or find another means of locomotion," SNCF warned travellers.
Facing a challenging week ahead, French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe met Sunday afternoon and evening with government ministers involved in the pension reform, and later met with Macron.
Macron, a centrist former investment banker, argues that the retirement overhaul will make a convoluted, outdated pension system more fair and financially sustainable, uniting 42 different plans into one. The government says it won't change the official retirement age of 62, but the new plan is expected to include financial conditions to encourage people to work longer as lifespans lengthen.
Unions see the reforms as an attack on worker rights and fear that people will have to work longer for smaller pensions. Some French workers can now retire in their 50s.
The new retirement plan will affect all French workers, but the strikes involve primarily public sector workers, including train drivers, teachers and hospital employees.
New nationwide protests are scheduled Tuesday and the prime minister will release details of the new retirement plan on Wednesday.
Yellow vest activists joined the protests Saturday, adding retirement reform to their list of economic grievances in protests around the country. Police fired tear gas on rowdy protesters at largely peaceful marches through Paris and the western city of Nantes.