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Overtaken by events:
a Paris journal
ROY PRIOR
Wednesday-Thursday, May 15th-May 16th. The
Paris disturbances have been very poorly reported in the
English press. First, the disturbance may have arisen out of complaints about the University system, but it has gone far beyond that now. It started with a row at
Nanterre, a university outside
Paris, when the university was close for an indefinite period, and seven students were summoned to appear before a university board. The
Sorbonne started to get active, in the big main courtyard; the
recteur called in the police to clear out the students who had gathered to discuss matters. The police carted the students off and there were demonstrations against this action, and against the police. The Sorbonne was closed, and the universities proposed to strike on Monday, May 6th, demonstrations all day long, finishing with 20,000 marching. The police charged the march at
St. Germain des Prés, and the barricades started to go up. The police use
gas. It finishes up with police hunting students through the streets, beating them with
truncheons. On Tuesday, another long march, about 40,000-50,000 people, students and workers. The
red flags lead the march and the
Internationale is sung at the
Arc de Triomphe. More demonstrations on Wednesday, when the left wing parties, hostile hitherto, jump on the bandwagon. Thursday, the Sorbonne is to be reopened: the police are on the scene, and the students demand withdrawal of police, opening of all the colleges again, and the freeing of the arrested students. The
Trotskyists hold a meeting where the whole affair begins to open out into a revolutionary movement. On Friday comes the explosion: thousands of students on a demonstration march are stopped by a dam of police: the students retire into the
Latin Quarter, filling the
Boulevard St. Michel up to the
Luxembourg. They spread out and start erecting barricades to fight the police if they charge. At 2 in the morning, the police attack, using gas
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grenades, tear gas, truncheons … fighting goes on until 5:30, around about 60 barricades: many students are injured and seven are still missing, no one knows where. On Saturday, tension: the
trade unions call for a
general strike. The student militants occupy an annex of the University, and use the premises for discussions and debates. On Sunday, the unions discuss and prepare their demonstration. On Monday the strike takes place, and workers and students march together to demonstrate against the police and the government. On Tuesday the government gives in, and says that the student demands for association in the organisation of the University will be met: and the newspapers give the impression that this is what it is all about.