France's Louvre museum closed as workers begin rolling strike

People stand outside the Louvre Museum, after French police arrested suspects in the Louvre heist case, in Paris, France Oct. 26. The museum is closed as workers begin rolling strike.

People stand outside the Louvre Museum, after French police arrested suspects in the Louvre heist case, in Paris, France Oct. 26. The museum is closed as workers begin rolling strike. (Abdul Saboor, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The Louvre closed due to a rolling strike demanding better conditions and renovations.
  • The strike follows jewel theft and infrastructure issues disrupting the museum's operations.
  • Unions demand more staff and oppose a 45% ticket price hike for non-EU tourists.

PARIS — The Louvre in Paris was closed on Monday after staff began a ​rolling strike to demand better working conditions and urgent renovations, disrupting access at the world's most-visited museum at one of the busiest times of the year.

The walkout comes as the museum is ⁠still reeling from the brazen theft in October of jewels worth 88 million euros ($103.30 million) and recent infrastructure problems, including a water leak that ‌damaged ancient books.

The Louvre normally welcomes approximately 30,000 visitors daily. Because the museum is routinely closed on ⁠Tuesday, it will not reopen before Wednesday, when workers will have to decide whether the strike continues.

After unions ‌warned of a strike last ‍week, the museum remained shut at the usual opening time of 9 a.m. on Monday, ⁠shortly before a vote confirming the walkout. Some 400 out ⁠of the museum's 2,200 employees supported the labor action.

"Due to a strike, the museum is closed for the day," the Louvre said on X.

Complaints over working conditions

The strike, called by the CFDT, CGT and Sud unions, follows what they described as "increasingly degraded working conditions" and insufficient staffing.

The unions said employees were suffering from "an ever-increasing workload" and "contradictory instructions" that prevented them from carrying out their duties properly.

Union requests include hiring more permanent staff, particularly in security and visitor services, and improved ‍working conditions. The unions also oppose a 45% ticket price increase from mid-January for non-EU tourists. The hike is meant to help finance renovations.

"We know very well that visiting the Louvre is sometimes the trip of a lifetime. So we really don't want to penalize visitors," Elise Muller, national secretary of Sud Culture union, told Reuters.

"In fact, we feel like we're the last ones trying to insist that the public should be able to visit a Louvre that is safe, a Louvre that has been neglected ‌by its management for several years now."

Tourists disappointed

Some tourists came to the Louvre early on Monday despite the threatened strike and found it shut.

"We ‌get here, and we see them taking the placards that say the time and turning them around, and one of them said the Louvre is closed," said Gretchen Johnson, an American visitor from Texas.

"And so then we went up and asked: 'When will it open?' He said, 'Probably not this morning, for sure not this morning.'"

Melissa Frisvold, also from Texas, said, "As tourists, ⁠we do not want to interfere ​in your politics. We just want to be gracious. So ⁠we understand when people need ‌to go on strike."

Contributing: Benoit Tessier, Lewis MacDonald and Mathieu Rosemain

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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