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Special
report: French labor law
 The French Senate approved on
Thursday a revised jobs law to replace the embattled First Employment
Contract (CPE) which has triggered weeks of massive protests.(Xinhua/AFP
Photo) | PARIS,
April 13 (Xinhua) -- The French Senate approved on Thursday a revised jobs law
to replace the embattled First Employment Contract (CPE) which has triggered
weeks of massive protests.
French President Jacques Chirac announced Monday to
replace a key provision of the CPE law, in an effort to quell two months of
protests during which more than 3,600 people were arrested.
Opponents said the CPE law, which allows employers to
terminate contracts with young workers aged under 26, will erode hard-won labor
rights and make it more difficult for youths to find long-term jobs.
Under the revised law, companies will be granted
subsidies for recruiting young people aged between 16 to 25 with low
qualifications, or coming from one of the 750 disadvantaged neighborhoods, many
of which saw youth riots last November.
The new measures are set to cost 450 million euros
(about 550 million U.S. dollars) over two years, according to government
estimates. Enditem |