France, the day after the fourth act of the protest of the yellow vests

After yesterday's tensions and the epochal alarms of the days before the fourth act of the protest of the yellow gilets has come the moment of dialogue, these the statement of the French minister Edouard Philippe after another Saturday of tensions that saw France scene of tough clashes and counted more than a thousand detentions.
According to estimates by the Ministry of the Interior, the security plan set in motion to deal with the demonstrators led to 1.385 detained and saw the participation of more than 125.000 protesters throughout the country of which 8.000 in Paris alone with moments characterized by violence unacceptable kept under control thanks to the abnegation of law enforcement. French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner commented: "We have been able to break the vandal momentum," emphasizing that white weapons and gas masks were found, even before the demonstrations began. An obvious sign, according to the minister, that "hundreds of yellow vests had arrived in Paris to cause damage".
The French police, however, is under accusation for the violence committed yesterday during the events of the yellow vests in Paris and in many other cities in France. There are numerous French newspapers denouncing the episodes, including the Var Matin, which collected the testimonies of many TV and radio correspondents in Paris who closely followed the violent demonstrations that took place yesterday in the capital of the Alps. Among protesters arrested and wounded, in the budget there are also many journalists hit by police officers who used tear gas and flash-ball guns to fight protesters, weapons that shoot rubber balls that cause bruises and bruises.
The American president Donald Trump has somehow put his hat on the yellow vests, linking the protest against the expensive fuel to the Paris agreement on climate, from which the US has pulled off. "The Paris agreement - tweeted Trump - is not working so well for Paris. Protests and revolts throughout France. People do not want to pay a lot of money, many to third world countries, perhaps to protect the environment.
Comments also come from Turkey where President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, recalling the criticism received by Europe during the great protests in Turkey five years ago, has called attention to violated human rights: "See what the police are doing now. those who made fun of our police, those who said our police were repressive, ... those who used political populism against refugees and Islamophobia have fallen into the hole they dug themselves ".

France, the day after the fourth act of the protest of the yellow vests

| EVIDENCE 3, MONDO |