Students join anti-Macron protests in France

France has been engulfed in protests as students, opposing regionalization of educational services, have joined railway workers, protesting French President Emmanuel Macron’s reforms in the field.

One of France’s most prestigious universities, L’Ecole Normale Superieure, was forced to shut down as students staged a campus occupation, protesting Macron’s plans to increase higher education’s competitiveness. At present, any school graduate is guaranteed a place at a public university, but the sitting president’s government is mulling over the introduction of a more selective approach to address overcrowding and to deal with high dropout rates.

According to the protesters, the government’s plan to change the criteria constitutes an attack on the fifth Republic’s egalitarian tradition of offering a higher education to all.

“Higher education must be accessible to everyone and the government that says that there is a lack of means is hypocritical,” Louis Boyard, president of National Union of High School Students said.

TWEET: This is against the principle of free access to higher education and free for all. A fundamental and honorary principle for France, in my mind.

 

The students have shown solidarity with railroad workers protesting Macron’s reform to make the railway sector, currently monopolized by SNCF, more competitive, for a month now. The railway strikes are expected to last until the end of June, unless the government and trade unions reach a consensus.

“He [Macron] announced that he will not let go of anything. Today we are announcing to him that the railwaymen, they too, will not let go of anything,” said Laurent Brun, the Secretary General of CGT Cheminots union.

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Over 30,000 people took part in the annual May Day demonstrations in Paris, which unexpectedly turned violent after some 1,200 masked people wearing black outfits started smashing restaurant windows and setting construction vehicles on fire. The clashes left several demonstrators injured, while over 280 people were detained; according to media reports, many of the vandals belonged to anarchist groups. The police and the government were subjected to strong criticism over their inability to avert violence during the traditional demonstrations.