Strikes in France appear to flag

Senate moves retirement bill to lower house

Garbage collectors begin tackling mounds of trash Tuesday in Marseille, France, where some 9,000 tons of garbage has piled up in the streets over the past two weeks of strikes.
Garbage collectors begin tackling mounds of trash Tuesday in Marseille, France, where some 9,000 tons of garbage has piled up in the streets over the past two weeks of strikes.

— French garbage collectors waded through mounds of reeking trash as they headed back to work Tuesday, and some oil workers deserted their picket lines - signs of fading momentum in the battle against raising the retirement age.

France’s finance minister declared that the protest movement had finally reached a “turning point,” and the Senate gave its final 177-151 vote of approval to President Nicolas Sarkozy’s plan to increase the retirement age from 60 to 62.

The bill now goes before the lower house today, where it is almost certain to pass. It then will face challenges by the opposition Socialists before the country’s Constitutional Court. Sarkozy is not expected to sign it until mid-November at the earliest.

For two weeks, nationwide protests and strikes over the pension overhaul have disrupted French life and the country’s economy, canceling trains, closing schools and shutting gas stations. On Tuesday, students with megaphones chanted outside the 17th-century Senate building on the edge of Paris’ Luxembourg Gardens as riot police stood by.

Unions have called for another nationwide day of protests Thursday, even if all Parliament action on the bill is over.

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Some of the youth demonstrations have had a violent edge, and the Interior Minister said 2,554 protesters were detained in the past two weeks.

French unions see retirement at 60 as a cherished social benefit. But President Nicolas Sarkozy’s conservative government says raising the retirement age is the only way to save the money-losing pension system because French people are living longer. It also notes 62 is still among the lowest retirement ages in Europe.

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, who has estimated losses from the strikes at up to $557 million a day, said the momentum has shifted.

“What’s very important is taking responsibility - it’s realizing that the economy needs to function,” she told Radio Classique.

In Marseille, workers tackled some 9,000 tons of garbage that has piled up in the streets over the past two weeks of strikes.

Authorities said it would take up to five days before France’s second-largest city starts smelling like itself again.

“The uncollected rubbish is bringing rats,” complained Melika Benslimane, a secretary. “We can no longer walk on the pavement because it’s full of trash.”

Marseille has another big problem: Its port has been blocked by striking dock workers, and oil tankers were lined up in the Mediterranean as far as the eye can see, awaiting entry to France.

Workers at five of the country’s 12 oil refineries were back on the job Tuesday, Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux said.

But that did not mean an end to fuel shortages. Strikes continued at all six of oil giant Total SA’s French refineries, and the plants going back to work will need a few days to fully resume operations. Crude oil coming in for processing was stuck on dozens of anchored ships, waiting to be unloaded.

France’s trains were operating at near-normal levels Tuesday, but many drivers were still hunting for fuel. At a gas station near the Eiffel Tower, nozzles were marked “out of order.”

“As long as we are still being kept out of gas stations, nothing is resolved,” taxi driver Aissa Smani said.

Environment Minister Jean-Louis Borloo said in a statement he hoped fourfifths of the nation’s gas stations would be supplied by this evening. Gas stations in the Paris region and centerwest are the hardest hit, the statement added.

Information for this article was contributed by Don McCaughan and Greg Keller of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 2 on 10/27/2010

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