The 43rd week of the Yellow Vests movement has been overshadowed by violence amid clashes between protesters and police. The first clashes were reported in Rouen.
"The demonstrators threw projectiles on the police. Summations were made and there was the use of tear gas in response to the throwing of projectiles, the protesters were rejected and returned outside the perimeter," the sub-prefect of permanence, Jean-Éric Winckler, said as quoted by AFP.
#GiletsJaunes à #Rouen. La situation dégénère entre la police et les gilets jaunes. Incendies, dégradations... pic.twitter.com/lS9814BYjm
— Elise Kergal (@EliseKergal) September 7, 2019
In Montpellier, between 1,500 and 3,000 people took part in the rally, with clashes also reported near the city's station. According to AFP, some of the protesters fired projectiles, prompting the police to use tear gas.
Des dégradations et actes de violence sont en cours dans le centre-ville de #Montpellier. Évitez le secteur.
— Préfet de l'Hérault (@Prefet34) September 7, 2019
Some incidents and clashes were also reported in Lille, where more than 600 protesters took part in the rally (according to a police source), while the Yellow Vests say the number of demonstrators there stood at 1,500.
Meanwhile, during a rally in Paris, an emblematic figure of the Yellow Vests movement, Éric Drouet, was fined twice "for organizing an undeclared event" and was ordered to leave the perimeter.
#SputnikVidéo | #Acte43 des #GiletsJaunes: Éric Drouet, l'une des figures du mouvement, a été verbalisé par les forces de police dans le quartier des #ChampsÉlysées pic.twitter.com/AP8lcpvpir
— Sputnik France (@sputnik_fr) September 7, 2019
The wave of Yellow Vests rallies started in France in November of 2018 over planned hikes in fuel taxes. While the French government has abandoned its plans to raise fuel taxes and introduced other measures to improve the country's socio-economic situation, protesters continue to take to the streets across France every weekend for demonstrations to express their discontent with the government's policies.