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French taxi drivers threaten paralysing access to Paris airports, French Open tennis

French taxi drivers have blocked roads at points across the country in a row with the government about payments for transporting patients

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A Taxi light is crossed out as taxi drivers take part in a blocking operation during a nationonwide protest against proposed changes in how the state finances medical transport services, in Marseille on Monday. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

French taxi drivers will next week step up protest actions, including paralysing access to Paris airports and the French Open tennis championship, in an increasingly acrimonious stand-off with the government, their main federation said on Saturday.

French taxi drivers have over the last week blocked roads at points across the country in a row with the government about payments for transporting patients which for many cab drivers form a major part of their businesses.

Meanwhile grievances against ride-hailing services such as Uber and Bolt have been aired again, with taxi drivers seeing them as a poorly-regulated threat to their livelihood.

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Sector representatives are due to attend a crunch meeting at the ministry of transport from 1500 GMT Saturday which, in a sign of the seriousness of the situation, will also be attended by Prime Minister Francois Bayrou.

Their chief demand is the wholesale withdrawal of new rules coming into force in October on the transport of patients to harmonise prices nationwide, which the taxi drivers say will severely erode their income.

‘Angry taxis’ is written on a taxi window as taxi drivers block a boulevard near the French Transports Ministry, in Paris on Thursday. Photo: EPA-EFE
‘Angry taxis’ is written on a taxi window as taxi drivers block a boulevard near the French Transports Ministry, in Paris on Thursday. Photo: EPA-EFE

“We are calling for the immediate withdrawal of this agreement and for a return to the negotiating table,” Emmanuelle Cordier, president of the National Taxi Federation (FNDT), told France Info radio.

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