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Unions fear the erosion of the cherished workplace benefit, and say the cost-cutting ax is coming down too hard on workers. Outside Paris' barricaded Lycee Lamartine high school, striking students said they also opposed the government's retirement reform. "It's about us, it's about the youth. We don't want to pay for the crisis and to pay for the actions of the big international ratings agencies," said Victor Grezes, a member of the UNL national union of students. Sarkozy's government has backed down from at least two reforms planned in education, opting not to incur students' wrath. Potent student-labor coalitions have brought down many planned government reforms over the years in France. The Education Ministry predicted Monday that more than one in four elementary and pre-kindergarten teachers would stay home Tuesday, though one union representing those teachers countered that nearly half would. Sarkozy's government is all but staking its chances for victory in presidential and legislative elections in 2012 on the pension reform, which the president has called the last major goal of his term. France's European Union partners are keeping watch, as they face their own budget cutbacks and debt woes. The new nationwide strikes was the fifth since May, including two last month that coincided with protest marches that drew at least 1 million people into the streets. The lower house of parliament, the National Assembly, approved the reform last month. The Senate has approved the article on raising the retirement age from 60 to 62, but is still debating the overall reform. The bill also raises the age of eligibility for a full pension from 65 to 67. Sarkozy, in a small concession Thursday, offered to allow women born before 1956 and who had more than three children to receive full pensions at 65. That apparently did little to stem the strike plans.
[Associated
Press;
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