The Prague Post - France says won't tolerate Canada-style 'Freedom Convoys'

EUR -
AED 4.243687
AFN 80.258579
ALL 97.948265
AMD 440.592197
ANG 2.067962
AOA 1058.465478
ARS 1362.804464
AUD 1.778285
AWG 2.082842
AZN 1.968988
BAM 1.955765
BBD 2.322859
BDT 140.58751
BGN 1.96051
BHD 0.433992
BIF 3425.439333
BMD 1.15553
BND 1.477574
BOB 7.949859
BRL 6.406145
BSD 1.15048
BTN 98.998247
BWP 15.463726
BYN 3.764933
BYR 22648.378878
BZD 2.310959
CAD 1.569961
CDF 3324.458889
CHF 0.938796
CLF 0.027884
CLP 1070.051049
CNY 8.298556
CNH 8.307576
COP 4778.715365
CRC 579.88973
CUC 1.15553
CUP 30.621533
CVE 110.263047
CZK 24.84493
DJF 204.866372
DKK 7.461301
DOP 67.948797
DZD 150.258339
EGP 57.438983
ERN 17.332943
ETB 155.208151
FJD 2.59792
FKP 0.851372
GBP 0.852443
GEL 3.166602
GGP 0.851372
GHS 11.84979
GIP 0.851372
GMD 81.469282
GNF 9968.823444
GTQ 8.840843
GYD 240.695737
HKD 9.070618
HNL 30.026468
HRK 7.537177
HTG 150.877328
HUF 402.707866
IDR 18834.322544
ILS 4.160155
IMP 0.851372
INR 99.58874
IQD 1507.073308
IRR 48647.793814
ISK 144.037202
JEP 0.851372
JMD 184.196738
JOD 0.819316
JPY 166.507229
KES 148.637368
KGS 101.051502
KHR 4612.918301
KMF 492.837731
KPW 1039.976573
KRW 1579.771091
KWD 0.353847
KYD 0.958683
KZT 590.089549
LAK 24822.560372
LBP 103080.774354
LKR 344.473899
LRD 230.095925
LSL 20.704233
LTL 3.411979
LVL 0.698969
LYD 6.285889
MAD 10.518914
MDL 19.701651
MGA 5194.907994
MKD 61.53391
MMK 2426.268419
MNT 4138.767016
MOP 9.301035
MRU 45.673191
MUR 52.588586
MVR 17.800977
MWK 1994.864669
MXN 21.910925
MYR 4.905805
MZN 73.89655
NAD 20.704233
NGN 1782.335411
NIO 42.33925
NOK 11.468204
NPR 158.397195
NZD 1.914238
OMR 0.444022
PAB 1.15048
PEN 4.152526
PGK 4.805915
PHP 64.814084
PKR 326.153924
PLN 4.273513
PYG 9179.837417
QAR 4.196726
RON 5.027136
RSD 117.197924
RUB 92.187067
RWF 1661.270578
SAR 4.337388
SBD 9.645657
SCR 16.420505
SDG 693.899733
SEK 10.950611
SGD 1.481278
SHP 0.908065
SLE 25.479855
SLL 24230.88081
SOS 657.488355
SRD 43.364756
STD 23917.128362
SVC 10.066822
SYP 15024.024763
SZL 20.690634
THB 37.444978
TJS 11.619594
TMT 4.044353
TND 3.40414
TOP 2.70637
TRY 45.493623
TTD 7.801862
TWD 34.111657
TZS 2973.947329
UAH 47.720955
UGX 4145.926572
USD 1.15553
UYU 47.299162
UZS 14617.741108
VES 118.057029
VND 30130.432615
VUV 137.626073
WST 3.026547
XAF 655.945383
XAG 0.031814
XAU 0.000336
XCD 3.122877
XDR 0.815786
XOF 655.945383
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.198532
ZAR 20.738243
ZMK 10401.156591
ZMW 27.812507
ZWL 372.080039
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

France says won't tolerate Canada-style 'Freedom Convoys'
France says won't tolerate Canada-style 'Freedom Convoys'

France says won't tolerate Canada-style 'Freedom Convoys'

French police warned Thursday they would prevent so-called "Freedom Convoys" from blockading Paris, as protesters against Covid rules began to drive towards the capital.

Text size:

Inspired by truckers paralysing the Canadian capital Ottawa, truckers and other motorists from across France are answering a call to converge on Paris on Friday.

The movement has raised fears of a repeat of the 2018 "yellow vest" anti-government protests that rocked France, only two months before President Emmanuel Macron is expected to seek re-election.

"There will be a special deployment... to prevent blockages of major roads, issue tickets and arrest those who infringe on this protest ban," the Paris police force said in a statement.

Police chief Didier Lallement had ordered officers to be "firm" with infringers, it added.

The city's ban order will remain in force until Monday.

Police said that anyone blocking roads faced up to two years in prison, a fine of 4,500 euros ($5,140) and a three-year driving ban.

"If people want to demonstrate in a normal fashion, they can do so," Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin told the LCI channel. But, he added, "If they want to block traffic, we will intervene."

The authorities in neighbouring Belgium also issued warnings as participants appeared to want to continue on to Brussels, the Belgian and European Union capital, on Monday for what they called "a European convergence".

Brussels mayor Philippe Close said the city would ban the demonstrations on the simple grounds that no-one had applied for a permit for the convoys to enter.

"Measures have been taken to prevent the blockade of the Brussels region," Close wrote on Twitter.

And Austrian police said no "Freedom Convoy" would be allowed in Vienna, saying the vehicles would cause an "unacceptable nuisance" as well as pollution from fuel emissions.

- 'Make our voices heard' -

Many protesters appeared undaunted in France.

"We'll be heading to the capital whatever happens," rubbish collector Adrien Wonner, who was planning to set off from the northern Normandy region, told AFP.

The 27-year-old, a past "yellow vests" protester, added that demonstrators wanted "to make our voices heard" but "not to blockade" Paris.

Anger over coronavirus restrictions are high on their agenda, particularly the "health pass" system that prevents the unvaccinated from entering enclosed public areas such as restaurants, bars, long-distance trains or sports stadiums.

Remi Monde, a prominent social media backer of the convoys, told AFP that their top demand was a "withdrawal of the health pass and all the measures that compel or pressure people to get vaccinated".

After conventional demonstrations failed to achieve results, "we want to try something else, and see what the government's response will be to joyous, pacifist people," he added.

The movement is "far from having a solid structure" but "this especially media-friendly new form of action could give new momentum to different protest groups," a police report seen by broadcaster RTL and newspaper Le Parisien said earlier this week.

- Vaccine pass 'aberration' -

Eyhande Abeberry, 52, told AFP that the vaccine pass was "an aberration" at the Wednesday send-off for one of the convoys in the southern French city of Bayonne.

But like in Ottawa, the French protests were poised to extend beyond Covid issues, also covering low wages and high energy costs -- the same grievances that fuelled the "yellow vest" demonstrations.

"There are many similarities with the yellow vest movement," said Laurence Bindner, a co-founder of JOS Project, a platform for the analysis of extremist online content.

The "yellow vests" -- so called because they wore fluorescent safety jackets that vehicles in France are required to have -- had quickly added "anti-system protests" to their original grievance over fuel price rises, she told AFP.

Bindner said "we may have to expect extreme elements" among the current protesters, but any future easing of Covid restrictions could cause the movement to "soften" its approach.

Macron's government has already mobilised billions of euros (dollars) to limit the impact on households of surging gas and petrol prices.

Far-right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen said that she "understood" the protesters, saying that the demonstrations were "another form" of the "yellow vest" movement.

 

Attal also indicated that the country may be in a position to drop its obligatory vaccine pass in late March or early April as cases fall. The presidential election's first round is scheduled for April 10.

burs/tgb-jh/gd

X.Kadlec--TPP