From Wikipedia - Reading time: 16 min
| France convoy protest | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Part of COVID-19 protests in France | |||
| Date | February 11, 2022 (2022-02-11) | ||
| Location | Paris, France | ||
| Caused by | COVID-19 pandemic in France, vaccine mandates in France | ||
| Methods | Convoy | ||
| Status | Ended | ||
| Parties | |||
| |||
The French convoy protest le Convoi de la Liberté ("the liberty convoy") was a protest in Paris inspired by the Canadian convoy protests. They were protesting COVID-19 restrictions as well as president Emmanuel Macron.[1][2][3][4]
Officials in Paris and Brussels banned protests relating to the Freedom Convoy, following information from organizers of a similar event opposed to France's Health Pass that five convoys from across France are due to reach Paris between February 11 and 14.[5][6]
French Police intercepted hundreds of vehicles and issued hundreds of fines in response to the protest.[7] Riot police employed tear gas against protesters and arrested 44 people on February 12. The protesters had been armed with weapons, including "slingshots, hammers, knives, gas cans and protective equipment."[8]
In addition to the convoy's influence from the Freedom Convoy in Canada is the reminiscence of the Yellow Vest protests which erupted in France in late 2018. Sorbonne University professor Jean-Francois Amadieu reports "They are not only anti-vaccine pass (or anti-vax). There are other grievances on the subject of individual liberties, as well as echoes of the Yellow Vest calls for a 'citizen's initiative referendum' [to allow citizens to vet government policy proposals] and more general demands involving purchasing power."[9]
| Responses | |
|---|---|
| Notable deaths |
|
| Regions | |
| Overseas | |
| Ships | |
| See also | |
This article about politics in France is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
KSF