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French PM Vows No Climbdown on Reforms after Violent Demos

A defiant French prime minister on Wednesday vowed to stand firm on a disputed set of labor reforms, despite mass protests against them that spiraled into violence.

"The government will not change a text which is already the outcome of a compromise sealed several months ago with reform-minded unions," Manuel Valls told France Inter radio.

President Francois Hollande's Socialist government is trying to push through a set of reforms to the labor market in a bid to force down France's stubbornly high unemployment rates.

Critics see the reforms as skewed towards business interests, and strikes and clashes have flared.

On Tuesday, several hundred masked protesters hurled projectiles at police, who made dozens of arrests.

Forty people were hurt in the clashes, which came with the international spotlight shining brightly on France as host of the Euro 2016 football championships.

Police said 29 members of the security forces were among those injured in Paris, while three cars were burned on the city streets.

Valls blasted the troublemakers, who he said wanted to "kill" the police officers patrolling the demonstration and accused the hardline CGT union, which organized the marches, of an "ambiguous attitude" towards those attacking the authorities.

"I call on the CGT not to organize this type of demonstration in Paris any more," Valls said.

Two further protest days are set for later this month.

Police and organizers gave wildly different figures for the turnout, with unions saying 1.3 million people had turned out across France but police estimating the crowds at 125,000 or more, some 80,000 of them in Paris.

Source: Agence France Presse


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