Taxi drivers in France are blockading roads with burning tires protesting the low-cost Uber app, resulting in at least 20 arrests. Air traffic controllers are also staging a demonstration, leading to dozens of canceled flights.
At least 20 arrests had already been made by 10.00 a.m. local time, following taxi driver protests around major cities including Paris and Marseille.
Drivers blocked roads with burning tires, prompting the arrival of riot police and firefighters. Some drivers had set pre-dawn bonfires which authorities had to put out.
Hundreds of taxis, joined by a few from Belgium and Spain, blocked a massive intersection leading into western Paris, causing huge disruption to the area.
Dozens of drivers tried to march from Porte Maillot intersection on to an eight-lane road, but police pushed the back with tear gas.
Drivers also staged ‘go slows’ on roads, causing major traffic jams.
One taxi driver was injured when a shuttle bus at Orly Airport forced its way through a blockade. Other drivers then threw stones at the windows, forcing passengers to get off the bus and walk.
There were also blockades around Charles de Gaulle Airport.
The taxi drivers are protesting over working conditions and competition from non-traditional services such as Uber.
Uber drivers "vandalize professionals who are paying taxes, who respect the rules," Rachid Boudjema, president of the taxi drivers union in Marseille, told AP.
In response to the protests, Uber sent a message to its French customers which said that the goal of the demonstrations was “to put pressure on the government to...limit competition.”
Meanwhile, a planned walkout from air traffic controllers prompted the French civil aviation authority, DGAC, to call on airlines to cancel one in five flights.
EasyJet said it had cancelled 35 flights, although Air France said it would operate more than 80 percent of its short- and medium-haul flights in France and Europe. However, it stressed that “last-minute delays or cancellations cannot be ruled out."
Hundreds of thousands of civil servants and teachers also went on strike on Tuesday, protesting against a pay freeze and poor salaries. Teachers are scheduled to march in cities across the country on Tuesday afternoon.
It's the newest challenge to Francois Hollande's Socialist government and its stop/start efforts to modernize the economy, in response to low economic growth and record-high unemployment. Earlier this month, Hollande announced what he called a “state of economic and social emergency,” involving a €2 billion (US$2.1 billion) plan to revive hiring and catch up with the world’s economy.
The protests come just one day after French farmers demonstrated against the prices of dairy and meat products in the province of Brittany, blocking roads and burning tires. The farmers demanded that prices be increased because the proceeds from their sale don't cover the cost of production.
(RT)