Fri. Jan 10th, 2025

PROTESTORS have caused carnage on the streets of Paris as cops try to contain them by blasting tear gas and wielding batons.

It comes just months before the Olympics and saw Pro-Palestinian groups and anti-Olympics activists joining together with traditional May Day labor rights marchers.

Protestors have taken to the streets of Paris

ReutersPolice have tried to contain the protesters by using tear gas[/caption]

GettyPro-Palestinian Protesters chant holding flags as they march among thousands[/caption]

Signs calling for higher pay were spotted amongst the chaos with one banner reading: “Tax the rich”, while another said: “Don’t touch the eight-hour workday!”

On a third sign someone wrote: “I want to live, not survive.”

Shocking images captured show a car set alight and cops wrestling with protestors.

Twenty-nine people were arrested over the marches.

Pro-Palestinian groups and anti-Olympics activists joined the rally, chanting slogans in support for people in Gaza.

Other protesters set makeshift Olympic rings on fire to show outrage over the Summer Games.

Frances unions have warned of a strike during the Games if the government does not adequately compensate people forced to work during summer holidays.

Government officials have failed to meet with union leaders, said Sophie Binet, the general secretary of the CGT union.

“How do you expect it to go well if the authorities don’t respond to our simplest demand?”, she said.

Marie Rieth explained she joined the May Day march in Paris because “it’s abominable what’s happened in Gaza for 7 months, and we find it disturbing what is happening to silence the voices of support for Palestine.”

“And we personally know Gazans who could have been killed under the bombs…Those we know have gotten out,” she added. “They lost everything.”

The riots have sparked concerns over if they will disrupt the Olympic games as the world watches on.

To try and prevent labour strikes during the event French ministers have announced they would offer bonuses to eligible government staff working while the Olympic and Paralympic Games takes place.

The country’s minister for transformation and public services, Stanislas Guerini, said it “must be a moment of success for the nation.”

Tony Estanguet, the head of the Paris 2024 organizing committee acknowledged that “the international context is particularly tense today.”

But he has said he hopes sports, not politics, will dominate the Games this summer.

He has also called for a domestic truce for the Olympics saying: “I would like for us to welcome the whole world in the best conditions and that we don’t ruin the party.”

GettyTwenty-nine people were arrested over the marches[/caption]

Here cops with batons try to contain a man

GettyThe protest comes just one month before the Olympics[/caption]

ReutersProtestors set fire to some makeshift Olympic rings to demonstrate their outrage[/caption]

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