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Thousands March in Paris to Protest Pension Reform Plan

Associated Press

   PARIS - Thousands of protesters opposed to the French government's plan
   to revamp the retirement system marched through Paris on Saturday, the
   24th day of crippling strikes.

   In an unusual gesture, unions organizing the march asked yellow vest
   protesters to join them. The march coincided with the 59th consecutive
   Saturday of marches by the yellow vest movement that seeks social and
   economic justice.

   Brief scuffles marred the union march as individuals, some wearing
   masks, burned construction materials along the route. The march went
   from the Gare du Nord train station to Chatelet in central Paris.

   "Whatever the color of the vest, we must stick together," the leader of
   the hard-left CGT union Philippe Martinez said on BFMTV, referring to
   the several hundred yellow vests who joined the march.

   President Emmanuel Macron wants to raise the retirement age from 62 to
   64 and rid the complex system of 42 special categories, notably railway
   and bus and Metro employees, with their own rules.

   The strikes have disrupted transport across France and beyond, hobbling
   Paris Metros and trains across the country as well as businesses. The
   strikes have been especially felt over the holiday season.

   On Saturday, the SNCF train authority said only six of 10 high-speed
   trains were running. The Eurostar from Paris to London had four of five
   trains running. Paris Metro service was improving, with partial service
   on several lines that had been shut down from the start. Only two
   lines, both automatic, ran without problem.

   Prime Minister Edouard Philippe plans to continue talks with unions
   after a holiday break. The unions plan a major day of action on Jan. 9.