Pension Reform: After Rubbish Collectors, Refineries Under Threat of Blockages

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Fuel Refineries are to be blocked to protest against the pension reform

PENSION REFORM PROTESTS: Two refineries could be shut down according to the CGT, which is already blocking fuel shipments

After the passage in force to the Assembly, the coup de force with the workers. The Minister of Industry Roland Lescure hinted this Saturday that the government could make requisitions in the event of the shutdown of refineries by employees on strike against the pension reform, like the requisitions of garbage collectors in Paris. At least two refineries, that of PetroIneos in Lavéra (Bouches-du-Rhône) and the Normandy refinery of TotalEnergies in Gonfreville-l’Orcher (Manche), could be shut down from this weekend and later on Monday, according to CGT.

Until now, strikers had been content to block fuel shipments, but refineries continued to produce. Asked about a risk of fuel shortage, the minister, a guest of France Info, replied: “We showed in the fall that we knew how to take our responsibilities there again, we will take them”, in reference to the requisitions then taken for unblock oil sites during wage strikes. He pointed out that such measures were “being deployed” with the Paris rubbish collectors.

“Today, most petrol stations in France and Navarre have fuel”

“We are not going to leave 65 million French men and women and a country together blocked by a few dozen individuals. So, the strike , (…) it is obviously an inalienable right, but the blocking of some individuals of a country (…), it is not possible”, added the minister. Assuring that “today, most service stations in France and Navarre have fuel”, Roland Lescure was critical of the leader of the CGT Bouches-du-Rhône Olivier Mateu that he, without naming him, called him an “arsonist firefighter”, who “tries to create panic, anxiety so that people go to get petrol and suddenly we find ourselves potentially without”.

The trade unionist, candidate for the succession of Philippe Martinez at the head of the CGT, had advised Monday to “comrades who get up in the morning to go to work” to “stock up, because it will not last forever”, after the on strike at the Fos-sur-Mer and Lavéra oil terminals.

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