Opponents of the controversial pension reform in France have blocked the entrance to Paris Charles De Gaulle (CDG) Airport.
According to reports in the French press, the 9th of mass strikes and protests are being held against the controversial reform that includes extending the retirement age by 2 years in the country.
Protesters who took to the streets to protest the reform in Paris blocked the entrance to Charles De Gaulle Airport in Roissy.
The CDG branch of the General Employment Union announced on its Twitter account that union employees have closed the road to Terminal 1 of the airport to crossings as of 10:00.
On the other hand, students in Paris, Lyon, Saint-Etienne, Roubaix and Nanterre protested at many universities.
While 50 percent of the teachers in the country participated in the strikes, students in more than 40 high schools in Paris and its surroundings began to protest.
In many cities, including Lille and Saint-Nazaire, demonstrators set up barricades on highways and bridges, cutting off traffic.
In addition, museums in Paris were closed to visitors as part of the strikes.
On the other hand, the General Directorate of Civil Aviation (DGAC) requested that 30 percent of flights at Orly Airport in Paris be canceled for tomorrow and the next day.
Similar requests for other airports are expected to be made during the day.
PENSION REFORM CRISIS
The pension reform, which is among the most important election promises of French President Macron, envisages raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 by 2 years.
The French have been organizing mass strikes and demonstrations since January against the reform, which has not been agreed upon in the National Assembly.
The government, on the other hand, chose to directly accept the reform bill in line with the 3rd paragraph of Article 49, without putting it to a vote in the parliament, since it did not receive sufficient support in the parliament.
Following the decision taken on March 16, protests began in France. Nearly 900 demonstrators were detained during the protests, where the police intervened harshly.
The images in which some journalists and observers were beaten by the police during the demonstrations caused reactions.
Opposition parties applied to the Constitutional Council for the annulment of the reform, which was accepted without a vote in the parliament.