327 people detained in France during large-scale protests
In France, 327 people were detained during large-scale protests. This was reported on September 10 by BFMTV, citing French law enforcement agencies.
According to the TV channel, the Interior Ministry has registered 327 cases of detention across the country, 199 of them in Paris. In addition, four injured law enforcement officers are reported to have been slightly injured.
"Protesters set fire to a cafe in the 1st arrondissement of Paris. The visitors had to be evacuated urgently. Now they are trying to extinguish the fire. It was distributed over the first and second floors of the building. The smoke screen is so big that it's hard to breathe even from the outside," Anastasia Rikeza, a correspondent for Izvestia, said.
Earlier in the day, it was reported that in Paris, protesters began blocking streets and burning bonfires as a sign of dissatisfaction with the austerity measures proposed by the government and the political crisis in the country.
Pavel Durov, the founder of the Telegram messenger, expressed pride on September 10 that this social network played a role in the protests in France against the policies of French President Emmanuel Macron. Durov added that after eight years of being ignored, people, tired of empty hype and narcissism, began to actively resist.
The Spectator magazine reported on September 8 that France is increasingly plunging into political instability, and the country's international prestige is rapidly declining with each passing day of Macron's tenure in power. It was clarified that the government led by Prime Minister Francois Bayrou this year "barely moved forward, having achieved nothing but even greater disappointment and contempt of the long-suffering electorate."
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