One person killed, dozens
detained in latest French protests
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| French protesters run as police lob tear gas the Champs Elysee Avenue. |
Clashes break out on the fifth straight weekend of protests
by the “yellow vests” movement in France where thousands of people converged on
Paris. More than 80 people were detained, and security forces were
investigating whether Russia played a role in stoking the protests.
By Stefan J. Bos
Scuffles broke out Saturday in central Paris between “yellow
vest” protesters and police. Security forces fired tear gas to disperse a crowd
trying to break through police lines.
The violence began in a side street near the capital’s famed
Champs-Elysees boulevard. Riot police blocked off access to some roads,
attempting to keep the protests in specific areas.
Authorities say that scores of people have been detained.
They were also investigating reports that Russian social media trolls were
apparently involved in stoking the French "yellow vest" protests, for
instance by disseminating disinformation like faked protest pictures.
Elsewhere a middle-aged man died after he crashed his car
into a truck at a protesters’ roadblock on the Franco-Belgian border.
The accident brings to seven the number of protest-related
deaths since a wave of anti-government yellow vest demonstrations began
sweeping France last month.
Fifth weekend
Saturday marks the fifth straight weekend of demonstrations
by the “yellow vest” movement, which takes its name from the safety vests
French motorists carry in their vehicles.
It emerged mid-November as a protest against fuel tax
increases but has since expanded into an expression of rage against the
government.
The rallies come despite this week's pledges by President
Emmanuel Macron to raise the minimum wage and to make tax concessions.
Initially, it was unclear whether Saturday's protests could
go ahead as police hunted a man believed to be responsible for killing three
people and wounding many more in the French city of Strasbourg this week.
He was shot to death by police late Thursday, bringing a
tense, two-day manhunt to an end. On Friday news emerged that a fourth person
had later died as a result of his shooting attack this week at Strasbourg's
famed Christmas market.

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