FRANCOIS MORI/ Riot police officers clash with protesters...
Transcript of FRANCOIS MORI/ Riot police officers clash with protesters...
Page 18A • Friday, May 27, 2016 a Las Vegas Review-Journal
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Use blanks to fill in daily highs and lows.
Sun Sun 2015 Record temperatures 2015 temps. 2016 temps Day rise set precip. High (year) Low (year) High Low High Low
1 Wednesday 5:25 7:53 0.00 107 (2012) 50 (1991) 97 77
2 Thursday 5:24 7:53 0.00 107 (2003) 49 (1955) 95 69
3 Friday 5:24 7:54 0.00 107 (1957) 53 (1961) 93 69
4 Saturday 5:24 7:55 0.00 109 (1996) 50 (1999) 91 72
5 Sunday 5:24 7:55 0.00 108 (1996) 51 (1993) 90 67
6 Monday 5:24 7:56 0.00 110 (2010) 48 (1993) 90 69
7 Tuesday 5:23 7:56 0.00 109 (2013) 52 (1954) 93 70
8 Wednesday 5:23 7:57 0.00 112 (2013) 52 (1995) 99 74
9 Thursday 5:23 7:57 0.00 111 (1985) 50 (1950) 92 77
10 Friday 5:23 7:58 0.00 108 (1996) 51 (1954) 96 72
11 Saturday 5:23 7:58 0.00 109 (1956) 55 (1975) 96 74
12 Sunday 5:23 7:59 0.00 112 (1940) 52 (1937) 100 78
13 Monday 5:23 7:59 0.00 114 (1940) 49 (1938) 103 81
14 Tuesday 5:23 7:59 0.00 115 (1940) 55 (1943) 105 80
15 Wednesday 5:23 8:00 0.00 116 (1940) 52 (1962) 108 79
16 Thursday 5:23 8:00 0.00 114 (1940) 53 (1944) 107 81
17 Friday 5:23 8:00 0.00 113 (1940) 50 (1944) 108 73
18 Saturday 5:23 8:01 0.00 115 (1940) 49 (1939) 106 76
19 Sunday 5:24 8:01 0.00 114 (1940) 56 (1939) 109 76
20 Monday 5:24 8:01 0.00 113 (2015) 53 (1939) 113 80
21 Tuesday 5:24 8:01 0.00 111 (1954) 53 (1941) 110 82
22 Wednesday 5:24 8:01 0.00 115 (1954) 56 (1944) 107 79
23 Thursday 5:25 8:02 0.00 113 (1959) 55 (1944) 107 76
24 Friday 5:25 8:02 0.00 113 (1961) 56 (1963) 109 75
25 Saturday 5:25 8:02 0.00 115 (1970) 55 (1941) 110 78
26 Sunday 5:25 8:02 0.00 114 (1970) 56 (1944) 111 88
27 Monday 5:26 8:02 0.00 114 (1977) 59 (1941) 111 87
28 Tuesday 5:26 8:02 0.00 115 (2013) 55 (1941) 108 87
29 Wednesday 5:27 8:02 0.00 115 (2013) 60 (1941) 109 89
30 Thursday 5:27 8:02 0.00 117 (2013) 60 (1970) 110 92
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FRANCOIS MORI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESSRiot police officers clash with protesters Thursday during a demonstration in Paris held as part of nationwide labor actions.
Envoy: Syrian peace talks won’t resume soon
GENEVA — The U.N. envoy for Syr-ia plans a resumption of peace talks “as soon as feasible” between the government and opposition, but he set no new date and expects that it will “certainly not” come within the next two to three weeks, his office said Thursday.
The lack of a solid date from Staffan de Mistura for the resump-tion testifies to continued violence in Syria and difficulties for U.N. efforts to ship humanitarian aid to
beleaguered Syrians amid fighting between President Bashar Assad’s troops and their allies and rebel fighters. The talks were suspended last month with little to no progress.
In New York, U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Samantha Power said Wash-ington shared the “frustrations and concerns” of de Mistura, and point-ed a finger at Russia — which has backed Assad’s forces.
“Russia has special responsibility to press the Assad regime to abide by the cessation of hostility and end its bombardment and siege of inno-cent civilians,” Power said.
By JAMEY KEATENTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Union strikes hit France
PARIS — Volley after volley of tear gas poisoned the Paris air Thursday, as authorities struggled against na-tionwide strikes and a groundswell of public anger at a high-stakes gov-ernment attempt to change the way France views work.
Oil refineries shuttered. Nuclear were plants on hold. Dock workers hurled firecrackers. Union activists cranked up the tensions to try to force President Francois Hollande to abandon a labor bill that gives em-ployers more flexibility and weak-ens the power of unions.
The big question is whether Thurs-day’s burst of labor action fizzles out after the one-day strikes end or in-spires lasting unrest.
Prime Minister Manuel Valls opened the door to possible changes in the labor bill that is triggering all the anger but said the government wouldn’t abandon it. Union activ-ists said it’s too late to compromise. Posters at a protest in the port of Le Havre bore a blood red tombstone representing the bill reading: “Not amendable, not negotiable: With-draw the El Khomri Law” — refer-ring to Labor Minister Myriam El Khomri.
The draft law, aimed at boosting hiring after a decade of nearly 10
percent unemployment and econom-ic decline, relaxes rules around the 35-hour work week and leaves work-ers less protected from layoffs.
Determined to defend worker pro-tections, union activists have staged months of protests and targeted the strategic fuel industry in recent days, causing gasoline shortages. The country’s two main oil ports were blocked Thursday, and only two of the France’s eight refineries were working, the head of the UFIP oil industry lobby, Francis Duseux, said.
“There could be improvements and modifications” in the bill, Valls said on BFM television Thursday. He didn’t elaborate on what might be changed and insisted that the “heart” of the bill — Article 2, which weakens the power of unions over workplace rules — should remain.
Protesters took to the streets in several cities — and in Paris, met with waves of tear gas as police fought bands of violent masked marchers. Police detained 77 people as tens of thousands marched from the Bastille plaza through eastern Paris.
Members of the CGT union, lead-ing the protests, remain angry that the government forced the bill through the lower house of parlia-ment without a vote because of divi-sion in the Socialist majority.
By ANGELA CHARLTON and RAPHAEL SATTERTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS