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Italian leaders back French 'yellow vest' protesters

AFP/The Local
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Italian leaders back French 'yellow vest' protesters
French 'yellow vest' or 'gilet jaune' protesters in Paris. Photo: Christophe Archambault/AFP

Five Star Movement leader Luigi Di Maio also offered to help yellow vest protestors organise.

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The two leaders of Italy's ruling populist coalition on Monday threw their support behind the "yellow vest" protesters in neighbouring France.

"Yellow vests, do not weaken!" Deputy Prime Minister Di Maio, who heads the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S), wrote in a post on his party's blog.

He denounced the French government for protecting the elite and the privileged. 

Matteo Salvini, his counterpart from the far-right, the anti-immigrant League, also backed the "yellow vest" protesters.

"I support honest citizens protesting against a president who governs against his people," Salvini said in a statement, while "firmly" condemning recent protest violence.

It’s extremely rare for European leaders to back anti-government protesters in a fellow member state.

The move underscored the increasingly sour relations between Rome and Paris, which have previously clashed over immigration policy, among other issues.

Photo:  Christophe Archambault/AFP

On Monday, Di Maio offered French protesters the use of their so-called Rousseau platform to improve organisation and "draw up an electoral programme".

"This system (Rousseau) is made for a horizontal and spontaneous movement such as yours and we would be happy if you want to use it," Di Maio wrote.

Through its Rousseau internet portal, it gathers the votes of members online to decide its policies, draft legislation and candidates.

The platform is presented by the party as a reflection of its unique commitment to grassroots democracy and a new politics.

But it has been criticised, notably by former members, for its lack of transparency and the leadership's tight control over its functioning.

The movement's ultimately successful candidate for Rome mayor in 2016, Virginia Raggi, was chosen by M5S followers on Rousseau from among several previously unknown candidates.

"Like other governments, the French one thinks mainly about representing the interests of the elites, those who live from privileges, no longer those of the people," Di Maio wrote.

French President Emmanuel "Macron's government is not up to expectations and some policies are de facto dangerous, not just for the French, but for Europe."

"In Italy, we have inverted this trend," Di Maio wrote, calling on French protesters to do likewise.

Around 50,000 "yellow vest" protesters took to the streets again on Saturday in cities around France to denounce Macron's centrist policies.

While the number of protesters has dwindled since the earliest protests, a smaller but increasingly radical core of "yellow vest" protesters remain determined to push on.

READ ALSO: France's 'yellow vests' may have helped Italy resolve its budget dispute

The demonstrations have been frequently violent since they began in late November, particularly on December 1 when crowds ransacked a museum in the Arc de Triomphe and daubed graffiti on the famed monument.

The French media has been targeted, while mock executions of Macron have also been a feature of some gatherings.

"Yellow vest" protests against fuel taxes began in rural and small-town France in late November, but then mushroomed into a wider revolt during December against the policies and governing style of 41-year-old Macron.

Italy's M5S-League coalition in June became the European Union's first populist-only government, taking over from the centre-left Democratic Party.

The ruling coalition has had numerous spats with Macron and with the European Commission in Brussels since coming to power, notably over its big-spending budget to apply populist measures.

READ ALSO: Italian government says its budget will prevent 'scenes like we've seen in Paris' 

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