French President Emmanuel Macron calls for order after ‘yellow vest’ attack on police
- Demonstrations on sixth weekend saw almost 40,000 take to the streets on Saturday

French President Emmanuel Macron called for “order” on Sunday after a sixth weekend of “yellow vest” anti-government protests that saw dwindling participation and a violent attack on police in Paris.
Speaking during a visit to the Saharan state of Chad where he was visiting French troops serving in a counterterrorism force, Macron said: “There must be order now, calm and harmony. Our country needs it.”
“It needs harmony, unity, sincere commitment to strong collective causes and we must heal the divisions,” said the 41-year-old centrist, who has struggled to tamp down the anger of the working poor in small-town and rural France over falling spending power and policies seen as tilted towards the rich.
Nearly 40,000 people took part in a sixth round of nationwide protests on Saturday, according to the interior ministry – around half the number who demonstrated a week earlier.
In Paris, the scene of fierce clashes and widespread destruction in previous weeks, the protests were mainly peaceful.
