Paris bank set on fire in French Yellow Vest protests

Protesters clash with riot police near Champs-Elysees avenue, vandalise luxury stores and set fires during the 18th straight week of anti-government rallies.

A Yellow Vest protester waves a French national flag in front of a burning newsagent during clashes with riot police in Paris on March 16, 2019.
AFP

A Yellow Vest protester waves a French national flag in front of a burning newsagent during clashes with riot police in Paris on March 16, 2019.

French Yellow Vest protesters set life-threatening fires, smashed up luxury stores and clashed with police on Saturday in the 18th straight weekend of demonstrations against President Emmanuel Macron. 

Large plumes of smoke rose above the rioting on Paris' landmark Champs-Elysees Avenue, and a mother and her child were just barely saved from a building blaze.

French police tried to contain the demonstrators with tear gas and water cannon with limited success.

The police said more than 100 people have been arrested so far.

Loading...

Mother, child rescued

One perilous fire targeted a bank on the ground floor of a seven-story residential building. 

As firetrucks rushed over, a mother and her child were rescued as the fire threatened to engulf their floor, Paris' fire service told The Associated Press news agency. 

Eleven people in the building, including two firefighters, sustained light injuries, as other residents were evacuated to safety.

The rioting comes at the end of a two-month national debate that President Macron organised to respond to protesters' concerns about sinking living standards, stagnant wages and high unemployment.

After the weekly protests dwindled recently, protesters were hoping to breathe new life into their movement against a president who they see as favouring the elite.

AFP

A Yellow Vest protester destroys a shop window during clashes with riot police forces on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on March 16, 2019, on the 18th consecutive Saturday of demonstrations called by the 'Yellow Vest' (gilets jaunes) movement.

How did the violence start?

The violence started when protesters threw smoke bombs and other objects at officers along the famed avenue — scene of repeated past rioting — and started pounding on the windows of a police van, prompting riot police to retreat.

Simultaneous fires were also put out from two burning newspaper kiosks, which sent black smoke high into the sky. 

Several protesters smiled as they posed for a photo in front of one the kiosk's charred remains.

Demonstrators also targeted symbols of the luxury industry, as shops including brands Hugo Boss and Lacoste were smashed up and pillaged, and mannequins thrown out of the broken windows. 

A posh eatery called Fouquet's, which is associated with politicians and celebrities, was vandalised and set on fire. 

A vehicle burned outside the luxury boutique Kenzo, one of many blazes on and around the Champs-Elysees.

AFP

A Yellow Vest protester holds up a placard reading "In tribute to the Yellow Vests protesters that have died and been wounded since 17.11.18" on the Champs-Elysees in Paris on March 16, 2019, during the 18th consecutive Saturday of demonstrations called by the 'Yellow Vest' (gilets jaunes) movement.

Chaos in Paris

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said up to 8,000 demonstrators were in Paris, including 1,500 "ultraviolent ones that are there to smash things up."

Castaner ordered police to retaliate against these "inadmissible" acts, condemning those who "call for violence and are here to ferment chaos in Paris."

Yellow Vest groups representing teachers, unemployed people and labour unions were among those that organised dozens of rallies and marches Saturday in the capital and around France.

Loading...

Protesters dismiss Macron's national debate on the economy as empty words and a campaign ploy by Macron to gain support for the European Parliament elections in May. 

Protesters are angry over high taxes and Macron policies seen as coddling business.

"Those who participated in this great debate are mostly retirees and upper middle class, meaning Macron's electorate, even though we understood this great national debate was supposed to respond to the yellow vest crisis," lawyer and protester Francois Boulo told Europe-1 radio.

Route 6