
Thousands in france given free electricity by protesting workers
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THEY HAVE BEEN DUBBED THE ‘ROBIN HOODS OF ENERGY.’ UNIONS SAY IT IS THE WORKERS’ WAY OF SHOWING OPPOSITION TO PROPOSED PENSION REFORMS Some energy workers have been dubbed ‘the Robin Hoods
of energy’ after illegally organising free energy to be sent to homes and public sites in France as part of the protests against pension reform. The CGT, one of France’s main unions, has
confirmed the action and used the “Robin Hood” term. It said: “Dozens of establishments in the public interest (including hospitals, _crèches_, _lycées_, and _collèges_) and thousands of
users and professionals were sent free gas or electricity. “Hundreds of small businesses were placed on a lower tariff, and hundreds of users were reconnected after fraudulent disconnection
in this cold weather period.” The methods have been described as a non-violent way to protest, a good alternative to action that causes damage to properties, and is much more welcome among
the public than blocking oil refineries and preventing petrol deliveries. ‘ACTION WITHOUT NOISE’ Such action is not new, however. They most recently date back to 2004, during protests that
occurred when EDF changed status and was deregulated for the first time. Fabrice Coudour, federal secretary of the CGT Federation of Mines and Energy (FNME-CGT), told Nouvel Obs: "[This
type of action] hasn’t stopped since, without necessarily making any media noise. “For example, we regularly intervene on illegal cut-offs of power, because they are made during the winter
break. This autumn, we switched 10,000 users on to free gas and very few talked about it.” The engineers are tight-lipped about exactly which establishments and homes are concerned, and have
to stay discreet. Making the switch can be risky for them because around 92% of homes in France now use smart meters like Linky. These can detect remote actions more easily. CONTINUED
PROTESTS Energy workers are among those to have taken a major role in the recent protests and strikes against the government’s proposed pension reforms. More protests and demonstrations are
set for this Saturday (February 11), and the most recent day of action was February 7. READ MORE: NEW STRIKE DAY ANNOUNCED IN FRANCE, PROTESTS ALSO THIS SATURDAY The government claims that
757,000 people turned out for the movement, but the CGT union said the number was closer to two million. RELATED ARTICLES UNIONS CALL FOR TOUGHER, LONGER PENSION STRIKES IN FRANCE SECOND
PENSION STRIKE IN FRANCE: HIGHER TURNOUT, TWO NEW DATES SET