Tensions let up slightly today after one-day strikes and protests yesterday pitting unions against the Socialist government and leaving many drivers in the lurch.
The heart of their dispute is a labor bill that would loosen rules on France's 35-hour work week and make it easier for employers to hire - and fire.
Some unions continued the strike today, and France's main oil company Total said four of its eight refineries were at a standstill. French media reported that the oil terminal in Le Havre on the English Channel also remained shut by strikes.
The CGT union, which has been leading the protests, focused its attention today on a trial of Air France union members accused of tearing the shirts off airline executives in a violent protest last year.
The judge in the trial in Bobigny outside Paris postponed the proceedings until September, amid fears that it could enflame tensions.
Union activists rallied outside the courthouse. Across the country, others briefly blocked entrances to the Marseille airport in solidarity with the Air France workers on trial, according to Marseille CGT member Maxime Picard.
The shirt-ripping incident last October, caught on camera and viewed worldwide, came to epitomize antagonism in French labor relations. It occurred after a meeting where the executives announced further job cuts after years of belt-tightening at the airline.
Air France lawyers decried the delay of the trial, arguing that the exceptional violence should be punished as soon as possible, and not be linked to the larger protest movement.
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