(by Angela Charlton, YahooNews.com) AP, PARIS – Protesters blockaded Marseille’s airport, Lady Gaga canceled concerts in Paris and rioting youths attacked police in Lyon on Thursday ahead of a tense Senate vote on raising the retirement age.

A quarter of the nation’s gas stations were out of fuel despite President Nicolas Sarkozy’s orders to force open depots barricaded by striking workers.

Gasoline shortages and violence on the margins of student protests have heightened the standoff between the government and labor unions who see retirement at 60 as a hard-earned right.

New violence broke out in Lyon, as police chased rampaging youths who overturned a car and hurled bottles. Riot officers tried to subdue the violence with tear gas. A gendarme helicopter circled overhead.

“It is not troublemakers who will have the last word in a democracy,” Sarkozy told local officials in central France, promising to find and punish rioters.

Students barricaded a Paris high school and planned protests nationwide Thursday, as the Senate wraps up protracted debate on a reform that Sarkozy calls crucial to his presidency.

The Senate vote on the bill is scheduled for Thursday, but the debate could drag on for another day or two. Opposition Socialists proposed more than 1,000 amendments to the pension reform bill approved by the lower house of parliament last month, and the Senators must debate and vote on each one.

The French government – like many heavily indebted governments around Europe – says raising the retirement age and overhauling the money-losing pension system is vital to ensuring that future generations receive any pensions at all.

French unions say the working class is unfairly punished by the pension reform and that the government should find money for the pension system elsewhere. They fear this reform will herald the end of an entire network of welfare benefits that make France an enviable place to work and live.

“We cannot stop now,” Jean-Claude Mailly, head of the Workers’ Force union, said Thursday of the protest movement.

Unions have held several rounds of one-day strikes in recent months, but scattered actions have turned increasingly radical as the bill heads for near-certain approval in the Senate. Leading labor unions are meeting Thursday to decide what to do next.

Student protests have forced the government to its knees in the past, and in recent days some have degenerated into violence. [In 2006, students succeeded in forcing then-President Jacques Chirac to retreat from plans to introduce a short-term labor contract for young people, even after the labor law had been approved by parliament.]

In Nanterre, the scene of running street battles between masked and hooded youth and riot police in recent days, the scene Thursday morning was calm, said Mehdi Najar, one of a few dozen red-jacketed mediators organized by the city hall to try to keep the peace.

“But there’s a big protest planned at noon in front of the prefecture, it risks being hot,” Najar said.

In Marseille, hundreds of workers blocked all access to the main airport for about three hours early Thursday. Passengers tugged suitcases along blocked roads as they hiked to the terminal, before police came in and the protesters dispersed.

Wildcat protests blocked train lines around Paris on Thursday. Protesters in cars and trucks blocked several highways around the country, from near Calais in the north to the Pyrenees in the south, according to the national road traffic center.

Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux lashed out at “certain people who take pieces of our territory for battlefields.” Speaking on Europe-1 radio Thursday, Hortefeux said 1,901 people have been detained since early last week.

Hortefeux insisted that the country has several weeks of gasoline reserves and that “the trend is toward improvement” in supplies. Still, he said a quarter of France’s gas stations lack fuel.

Kamal Guerfa works – or at least shows up for work – at a gas station in Lyon. But on Thursday, there was nothing to pump.

“We are here, ready to work, there’s no problem with that. The problem is that people come to get gas and there is none. That’s the problem,” he said.

Laurette Meyer’s heart sank when she saw the empty pumps.

“It is penalizing. We work in the building construction business. We have employees who drive all day long in order to build the houses for our customers and it’s starting to be very difficult,” she said.

Sarkozy accused strikers of “taking the economy, businesses, daily life hostage.”

Families around the country are on edge over the gasoline shortages because school vacations start Friday.

Authorities, however, are hoping that the vacations cool off student tempers.

On Thursday morning, students shut down the Turgot High School near the Place de la Republique in eastern Paris after a student union vote. Teens sat in the middle of the street, barring vehicle traffic. Some sang songs and chanted labor slogans while police guarded the area.

The U.S. Embassy in Paris warned Americans “to avoid demonstrations currently taking place in France.” The warning said peaceful demonstrations can escalate into violence, and urges visitors to check with their airlines in case of airport disruptions, and check with rental car agencies about the availability of gasoline.

The strikes are hitting the entertainment industry, too. Lady Gaga’s website says the singer postponed two Paris concerts scheduled for Friday and Saturday “as there is no certainty the trucks can make it” to the show.

AP Television News reporters Greg Keller and Oleg Cetinic in Paris and Jonathan Shenfield in Lyon contributed to this report.

Copyright ©2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. The information contained in this AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Visit news.yahoo.com/s/ap/eu_france_retirement_strikes for the original post.

Questions

1. What disruptions have protesters caused across France as they oppose a change in retirement age?

2. Why is the debate in the French Senate expected to take a few more days before Senators vote on the new pension law?

3. Why does the French government say that raising the retirement age from 60 to 62 is necessary?

4. Why do French unions oppose pension reform?

5. What other motive might many young people have for participating in protests other than opposing a new law on retirement age?

6. What do you think about the protesters’ overturning/burning cars, and battling with police in their attempt to stop parliament from passing a new law on the retirement age: is this an effective method for preventing a law from being passed?  Explain your answer.

Background

Full-time workers in France are guaranteed the following: (from cbsnews.com)
  • at least five weeks vacation (many get 8 weeks vacation)
  • a dozen public holidays
  • a maximum 35-hour work week

NOTE: Unions have said the government should get the money needed for pensions by raising taxes on corporations.  President Sarkozy has ruled out raising taxes, saying France already has among the highest taxes in the industrialized world.

Resources

For photos, go to wsj.com.

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