After President Emmanuel Macron pushed through a contentious pension reform without legislative approval, protesters blocked a major highway around the French capital and intensified strikes at refineries on Friday.
According to the interior minister, protests broke out across the nation on Thursday night in response to Macron’s action, and more than 300 individuals were detained.
On Friday morning, some 200 protesters briefly blocked traffic on the ring road outside the capital.
Soumaya Gentet, 51, a CGT union member from supermarket chain Monoprix, said she was incensed and would continue to protest until the bill was revoked.
“They’re not taking into account what the people want,” she said.
Her colleague Lamia Kerrouzi agreed. “Macron doesn’t give a fig about the people,” she said.
“He doesn’t understand the language of the people. It needs to be repealed.”
In the energy sector, strikers were to halt production at a large refinery by this weekend or Monday at the latest, CGT union representative Eric Sellini said.
Workers had already been on a rolling strike at the northern site TotalEnergies de Normandie, but halting production would escalate the industrial action.
Strikers continued to deliver less fuel than normal from several other sites, he added.
The government on Thursday afternoon invoked a controversial constitutional power to impose the pension overhaul by Macron, sparking protests outside parliament in Paris as well as in several other cities.
The ensuing unrest saw 310 people arrested around France, including 258 in Paris, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin told RTL radio.
“The opposition is legitimate, the protests are legitimate, but wreaking havoc is not,” he said.
A couple of thousand protesters massed opposite parliament on Thursday to protest the move.
In the evening, several clashed with police, who moved in to arrest some on suspicion of seeking to cause damage.
Similar scenes unfolded across France.
Several stores were looted during protests in Marseille while clashes between demonstrators and security forces also erupted in the western cities of Nantes and Rennes as well as Lyon in the southeast