40 Years After May ‘68: The French Are Still Taking It To The Streets

By Jessamyn Embry

The spirit of revolution is alive and well in France this spring. Forty years after the massive student uprisings of May 1968, France is poised for large scale protests in the coming weeks.

Fisherman have blocked access to ports throughout the country in recent days asking for tax breaks due to the rising cost of diesel fuel. Yesterday, the workers at the port of Marseille went on strike to protest the privatisation of loading activities at state-run ports.

Marseille is a popular cruise ship destination as well as a ferry terminal serving Corsica, Sardinia, Algeria, and Tunisia. Travellers planning to arrive or depart by ship in the coming weeks should contact their travel agent or the Marseille Port Authority for the latest updates.

Rail service, Air France, and public transport unions are expected to strike tomorrow (May 22) protesting against a planned change in the minimum age for collecting full pension. The minimum age is currently 40, but the government, arguing that increasing life expectancy requires people work longer, plans to extend the minimum age to 41. Civil servants are expected to join in the strike in opposition to a planned cut in 58,000 jobs over the next two years. Rail unions are threatening an open-ended strike as of June 2. Some trains will be running tomorrow. Visit the French Rail Network’s website for information about specific routes.

On May 24, teachers and students are expected to protest the government’s plans to cut over 11,000 education jobs in the coming academic year. The students and teachers have been vocal in the streets over the last two months, with ever-growing numbers of participation. A national one-day teachers’ strike was held last week with hundreds of thousands of participants. The May 24 strike is expected to be of equal magnitude.

As published on PlanetEye

Related articles:

Barricades of May ‘68 Still Divide the French – New York Times, 30 April 2008

France’s Bright Shining Lie – New York Times, 24 May 2008

Images by jprowland and rêverie (flickr)

One Response

  1. French mentality… I am French myself and like many of my co-nationals, I think this strike-addiction is really a shame upon us! Specially when it turns out to be more than strikes but road and railway blockages that affect the whole population…

    French media are very responsible for the ambient permissivity in France towards blockages. As many journalists in France are former “68 ards” or under the influence of the 1968 ideology:”it is forbidden to forbid”…

    It seems also that it is forbidden to think a little bit these days…

    Let’s keep the faith, things will change and French will have to start working to face the globalised economy and pay the soaring bills…

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