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Strikers restore blockade at French fuel depot

October 26, 2010 00:00:00


Lebanon's Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah addresses his supporters via a video projection during a ceremony marking the 23rd anniversary of the death of the founder of the Islamic Republic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in Beirut. — Reuters Phot
MARSEILLE, Oct 25 (AFP): The cat and mouse game between strikers and police continued in France early Monday, with dockers restoring their blockade on a big fuel depot in the south and a central depot being unblocked.
The oil depot at Fos-sur-Mer, the biggest in the south of France, was back in the hands of union members opposed to President Nicolas Sarkozy's plans to raise France's retirement age, an AFP photographer said.
Some 200 demonstrators blocked off several petrol (gasoline) tankers as riot police looked on.
Meanwhile the depot at Saint-Pierre-des Corps near Tours in central France was freed after a week of paralysis, several sources said. The 30-odd people blocking the facility left without incident.
Sarkozy hopes to put his titanic battle to raise France's retirement age behind him this week by signing the measure into law despite a new wave of strikes, rallies and fuel blockades.
With thousands of families heading off for school half-term holidays, and lawmakers expected to give the pensions bill their formal final approval on Wednesday, Sarkozy hopes the mass protest movement will die away.
But, with Sunday newspaper opinion polls showing the embattled president more unpopular than ever, trade unions and student bodies have declared at least two more days of action, and strikes continue in the key fuel sector.
One petrol station in four around the country has run dry, amid strikes at refineries and blockades of fuel depots by strikers playing a cat and mouse game with riot police sent to disperse them.
French university students are planning to march on Tuesday to defend the right to retire at 60, and trade unions have called their campaign's seventh one-day nationwide strike and day of rallies on Thursday.
Government supporters were putting a brave face on things, however, betting that on Wednesday-when the National Assembly rubber stamps the pensions law already approved by both houses of parliament-the movement will fizzle.

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