French PM brushes aside resignation talk
Some 2,000 angry students massed on railway tracks in Paris today, stopping international train traffic in a new push to force a contested youth labour law off the books.
But France’s equally combative prime minister refused to say whether the measure would be repealed.
Dominique de Villepin, calling for calm, spoke more clearly about his own destiny, brushing off growing speculation that he would resign.
President Jacques Chirac “gave me a mission, and I will lead this mission to the end,” Villepin told a news conference.
“All the rest is pure speculation and fantasy.”
Stepping up wildcat disruptions with high-profile protests, students set up a pre-dawn blockade that stopped a convoy of parts for the Airbus A380 jumbo jet, the crown jewel of European aviation.
Students paralysed all trains at the Gare du Nord station in Paris for nearly two hours, blocking arrivals and departures including Eurostar services to and from London and the Thalys to Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany.
Some 200 police in riot gear moved them out, allowing thousands of passengers packed into the station to start their travels.
Protesters earlier occupied the tracks of another Paris station, the Gare de l’Est, for an hour. In the eastern city of Strasbourg, several hundred students blocked the Pont de l’Europe bridge that links France and Germany.
“This is very irritating, but I can understand it,” said John Ring, a 40-year-old French businessman at the Gare du Nord who was trying to get to The Hague. “What I can’t understand is how the government would allow the situation to get to this point.”
While continuing to justify the reasons behind a reform aimed at denting sky-high joblessness among the young, Villepin said he was listening to the voices of discontent.
As the crisis over the jobs law that gained steam in mid-March rolled on, MPs from the governing UMP party met for a second day with unions and students in search of a way out. Protesters are demanding the measure be withdrawn.
“The immediate priority, as we all know, is restoring calm,” Villepin said. “It is time to get out of the crisis,” he said, adding that classes should resume ahead of exams.
The jobs law, which aims to encourage hiring by making it easier to fire youths, has inspired disruptive protests at hundreds of universities and high schools and spurred massive demonstrations that have ended in violence by a few troublemakers.
The law is designed to inject flexibility into the country’s rigid labour rules. It originally provided for a two-year trial period during which employers could fire youths under 26 without cause. Protesters say it would make young employees easy to get rid of.
Villepin for weeks relentlessly defended the jobs law, until Chirac handed the problem to MPs from his party.
In a manoeuvre to save face for Villepin, Chirac signed the controversial measure into law last weekend – but ordered the talks.
Villepin refused to prejudge the outcome of negotiations, saying “we will draw conclusions together” and “make the necessary choices to combat unemployment.”
He backed down several notches from his inflexible stance of the past.
“I am pragmatic. In this time of dialogue it is important to be open,” he said. “I am listening.”
But the prime minister insisted that the 23% rate of youth unemployment that climbs above 50% in depressed, heavily immigrant suburbs, is at the heart of “French difficulties.”
It was a major cause in triggering riots by suburban youths last autumn.
“It is my responsibility, as head of the government, not to allow such a situation to go unanswered,” he said.
“Our country today needs action.”





