SOCIETY
France hit by third national strike this month
Baku, October 12 (AZERTAC). French unions are staging a national day of strikes and demonstrations in opposition to the government`s pension reforms - the third in a month.
About 500,000 people had taken part in protests by noon, the interior ministry said, higher than previous turn-outs.
The cabinet wants to raise the minimum retirement age from 60 to 62, and from 65 to 67 for a full state pension.
Some unions will vote later on Tuesday to decide whether to escalate their protests with open-ended strikes.
Oil industry hit
Half of all flights to and from Paris Orly airport, and one in three at Charles de Gaulle and Beauvais have been cancelled for Tuesday.
Train drivers launched an open-ended strike on Monday evening.
Just one in three TGV high-speed trains are expected to run. Eurostar says its service between Paris and London has been operating normally.
Commuter trains in Paris were badly hit but the metro is less affected and buses should run as usual.
"This is one of the last chances to make the government back down," said Francois Chereque, the leader of the French Democratic Confederation of Labour (CFDT). "The large majority of employees cannot afford to pay for repeated days of strikes."
In Paris, the Eiffel Tower was closed because of a lack of staff.
However, French Prime Minister Francois Fillon called the strikes "irresponsible" and said: "We are determined to carry through this reform."
The CGT and CFDT unions said the turn-out for demonstrations by noon was the strongest yet.
Further mass demonstrations are planned for Saturday.
The French oil industry has been hard hit. Workers at the Fos-Lavera oil port in southern France are striking for a 15th day, forcing up diesel prices in Europe. Diesel supplies have run out on Corsica.
Some 56 petrol tankers and 29 cargo ships are stranded outside Fos-Lavera port.
Ten of France`s 12 mainland refineries have been affected. However, leading oil firm Total insisted supplies on the mainland were not being disrupted.
Public transport and energy sector workers will vote on Tuesday on whether to begin open-ended strikes.
These rolling strikes would be organised by serving notice of 24-hour stoppages and renewed each day before they expired.
Among those to have already declared in favour are union members from the state rail company, SNCF, and gas and electricity companies.
One cement worker demonstrator in the central town of Angouleme told Agence France-Presse: "I`m prepared to extend the strike. I started working at 17 and now I`m 50 and I`m starting to get really fed up with it."
The French upper house, the Senate, is currently voting on the pension reform plans, article by article.
The most contentious parts - raising the standard minimum retirement age from 60 to 62, and the age for a full state pension to 67 from 65 - have already been approved. The rest of the bill is expected to be passed by parliament in the coming weeks.
"We`re not here to do what`s easy, we don`t always have the people`s approval," Labour Minister Eric Woerth said. "It`s difficult to tell the French that the they have to work more, up to 67 years, but it has to be done."
Last week, President Nicolas Sarkozy said he would inject more money into his retirement reform bill so some mothers could receive a full pension even if they had taken years out of work. The changes will be financed by new taxes that will bring in 3.4bn euros (£3bn).