Respite in Paris as yellow vest movement abates

AP  |  Paris 

The yellow protests, which have brought particular to over the past few weeks, clearly abated Saturday, as the holiday season began in earnest.

In a stark contrast to the of previous weekends, tourists strolled down the avenue near the and perhaps the grandest of Parisian boulevards remained open for traffic.

A few hundred protesters cordoned by police forces did walk across toward the near the but were stopped by police in a small adjacent street as some shop owners closed down early.

Despite the more benign backdrop, the protests are still having a knock-on effect.

The just outside Paris, for example, has been shut for the day after yellow protesters said they will hold a demonstration at the famous chateau that was home to succession of French kings until the French Revolution in 1789.

However, only a few protesters wearing their trademark vests showed up in Versailles, with most of the protesters gathering peacefully at the foot of the in the picturesque neighborhood of Montmartre.

Paris' other big tourist hotspots such as the and the Eiffel Tower, which had closed a couple of weeks back, remained open.

One reason why the heat has been taken out of the protests relates to the concessions from French They include tax-free overtime and a freeze on gas and this winter. The measures are expected to cost an estimated 10 billion euros (USD 1.14 billion).

Much of France, but particularly Paris, has endured weeks of protest by a nationwide movement that at times descended into violence. Ten people have died since the start of the movement mid-November, mostly in traffic accidents.

According to several reports in French media, a man died Friday night near the southern city of after his car slammed into the back of a truck that had stopped near a group of protesters.

Outside Paris, around 200 roundabouts remained occupied across the country. In near the Spanish border, dozens of demonstrators blocked trucks and chanted "Macron, Demission," which translates as "Macron, resign." In near Saint-Etienne, protesters blocked a major road and set fires but shops remained open in the city center.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, December 22 2018. 16:55 IST