Tear gas fired at striking French train workers

June 17, 2014 05:47 pm | Updated 05:47 pm IST - PARIS

French rail workers attend a general assembly in the Lyon Perrache train station, central France, on June 12, 2014.

French rail workers attend a general assembly in the Lyon Perrache train station, central France, on June 12, 2014.

French riot police clashed with striking train workers, who hurled bottles and blocked traffic in anger on Tuesday over a bill to reform the state-run railway system.

A weeklong strike by rail workers has caused some of the worst disruption to the country’s rail network in years and is heating up as the reform bill goes to the lower house of Parliament for debate on Tuesday.

The bill would unite the SNCF train operator with the RFF railway network, which would pave the way to opening up railways to competition. Workers fear the reform will mean job losses and security concerns. The government says the reform is needed to create a stronger structure for the railways, as France and other European countries gear up for full-scale railway liberalization in the coming years.

Several hundred workers staged a protest on Tuesday near the National Assembly on Paris’ Left Bank, waving red union flags and demanding that the bill be delayed or changed.

The protesters blocked cars and tried to push past police to approach the parliament building, firing flares and throwing bottles. Officers responded with tear gas and batons and wrestled with a few protesters to the ground. The protesters retreated and their demonstration continued peacefully.

Later on Tuesday, French television showed footage of protesters marching onto train tracks at Paris’ busy Montparnasse station, which links travellers with cities across western and southwest France.

The strike began on last Wednesday, and while only a minority of workers are taking part, it has disrupted travel on trains across France and on commuter lines. About a third of trains were cancelled nationwide on Tuesday. The strike has not affected international lines such as the Eurostar train from Paris to London, but it has caused problems for international travellers using the commuter rail to and from Paris’ Charles de Gaulle Airport.

Prime Minister Manuel Valls broke with the tradition that governments don’t meddle in strikes, saying on Monday that the movement was “not useful and not responsible.”

Lawmakers begin debating the bill on Tuesday afternoon.

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