1984 French protests

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The 1984 protests in France were mass protests and a wave of strikes that affected France between June 22–25 after new plans to privatise private schools and primary/elementary schools. Thousands participated in the rioting on 25 June, but for the first 3 days, between 850,000 and one million citizens took to the streets in the largest street demonstrations and opposition movement since 1968. Demonstrations culminated into violence as troops clashed with students protesting the new plans. The Bastille was stormed on 25 June, after days of nationwide protests, especially in Paris. François Mitterrand, who was president at the time, ordered police to quell dissent and withdrew the new bills. Despite this, demonstrations intensified, with anti-privatisation of private school protests turned into chaos, with the movement being largely suppressed.[1][2][3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Thousands storm the Bastille to protest private-school reforms". Christian Science Monitor. June 25, 1984.
  2. ^ "French citizens block private school reform bill, 1984". Nonviolent Action Database. 4 December 2011.
  3. ^ "850,000 JAM PARIS IN A SCHOOLS PROTEST". NewYorkTimes. June 25, 1984.