
Bordeaux, one of the bastions of the four-month-old anti-government protest movement, has, like Paris, seen repeated rioting and destruction of property during successive Saturday protests that draw thousands of people.
The centre-right mayor of France’s fifth-biggest city by population, Nicolas Florian, said he was “very worried” about this weekend’s edition, the 20th since mid-November.
“We’re told there will be hundreds of hooligans and people who are spoiling for a fight (with the police),” said Florian, who took over from his long-serving predecessor Alain Juppe on March 7.
“I’m asking shop owners to lower their shutters for protection and I’m asking the people of Bordeaux to stay home to allow the police do their work and not risk any accident,” he told reporters.
At the start of the year, the “yellow vest” movement had appeared to be losing steam, with dwindling numbers of protesters seen by some as evidence the hundreds of town-hall style debates on policy called by President Emmanuel Macron had defused their anger.
But two weeks ago, it revved up again, erupting into major rioting and looting on the famed Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris.
The Bordeaux police said they were bracing for similar scenes there on Saturday.
It cited the “manifest desire of certain violent, very determined groups to cause a major disturbance of the peace and damage” and declared a large part of the city centre off-limits to the protesters.
In Paris, too, the authorities banned demonstrations on the Champs-Elysees and several other areas for a second week running.
On Friday, one of the key figures in the movement was fined €2,000 (RM9,168) for organising two Paris protests without informing the authorities.
Eric Drouet, a 34-year-old truck driver who created a Facebook page that helped rally protesters against fuel taxes last November, did not appear at his trial because of work obligations, said his lawyer, who announced he would appeal the ruling.
He has denied being one of the organisers of the leaderless, grassroots revolt.
Road deaths up
The “yellow vest” movement – so-called after the protesters’ high-visibility jackets – began in rural France over fuel taxes but quickly grew into a broader wave of resistance to Macron’s economic policies, seen by critics as tilted towards well-off city-dwellers.
The protests have been overshadowed by the violence of a minority of radical far-left and far-right demonstrators.
On Thursday, France’s road safety department blamed a 17% spike in road deaths on the destruction by the yellow vests of hundreds of speed radars.
In February, 253 people died in road accidents in mainland France, 37 more than the same month a year ago.