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France’s Louvre Museum was closed on Monday after employees began a rolling strike over pay, staffing shortages, and deteriorating working conditions, disrupting access to the world’s most-visited museum during a peak tourist period. The walkout comes just two months after a high-profile jewel heist and follows recent infrastructure issues, including a water leak that damaged ancient books. The Louvre, which usually welcomes around 30,000 visitors a day, will remain shut until at least Wednesday due to its regular Tuesday closure.

The strike was called by several unions, including CFDT, CGT, and Sud, which say staff are facing rising workloads, insufficient permanent employees, and unclear instructions that make it difficult to perform their duties. About 400 of the museum’s 2,200 workers supported the action. Unions are demanding urgent renovations, better working conditions, and more permanent hires, especially in security and visitor services, while also opposing a planned 45% ticket price hike for non-EU tourists intended to help fund refurbishment work.

Tourists arriving early on Monday were left disappointed after discovering the museum was closed. While many expressed frustration, some visitors voiced understanding of the workers’ concerns. Union representatives said the aim was not to penalise visitors but to ensure the Louvre remains safe and properly maintained, warning that long-standing neglect by management has pushed staff to take action.

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A nationwide strike, organised by workers who are unhappy with Emanuel Macron’s pension reforms, have almost completely frozen the European country of France.

Along with transport workers, even police, lawyers and hospital and airport staffs have come out in support of the strike.

The strike has badly affected the transportation system in the country. Several flights have been cancelled. The rail transport has cut down its number of services. The road transport is almost completely in a standstill state.

The present strike is the most serious strike the European country of France has witnessed in its recent history.

Mr. Macron, who came to power as a solution to the problems the French people face, is now largely unpopular in the country.

The anti-establishment wave, which helped Mr. Macron to march to power, is at present against him.

Most of his reforms have ended up against the interest of the people of the country. The controversial pension reform is one of them.

If the things progress in this manner, the wave that helped him to win the power of the country itself will push him down from the seat of power.

What Mr. Macron represents at present is failed populism. The rest of the Europe has a lesson in the French experience.


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