Eiffel Tower Shuts Down As Workers Protest Spike In Pickpockets Targeting Tourists

Tourists wander under the Eiffel Tower as an information board announces that the Eiffel Tower is temporarily closed, in Paris, Friday May 22, 2015. The Eiffel Tower is closed to the public because workers are protes... Tourists wander under the Eiffel Tower as an information board announces that the Eiffel Tower is temporarily closed, in Paris, Friday May 22, 2015. The Eiffel Tower is closed to the public because workers are protesting a recent rise in aggressive pickpockets. The Paris monument is normally open every day of the year and brings in thousands of visitors daily. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere) MORE LESS

PARIS (AP) — The Eiffel Tower closed to the public Friday as workers protested a rise in aggressive pickpockets around the Paris landmark that attracts thousands of visitors daily.

The walkout came a day after Paris authorities said crime against tourists in the French capital had dropped this year thanks to reinforced police presence and video surveillance.

The company that manages the tower said it did not open Friday because the staff was concerned about petty crime around the site and it is working with police to reach a solution. Crowds of tourists streamed around the monument, unable to reach its viewing towers. The tower is normally open every day of the year but sometimes closes briefly for bomb threats or strikes.

Workers at the Louvre staged a similar walkout in 2012, complaining of a rising problem of pickpockets haunting the famed Paris museum’s vast galleries.

Paris authorities said violent theft was down 25 percent and pickpocketing was down 23 percent in the first four months of 2015, compared with the same period last year, according to numbers released Thursday.

In recent months, city authorities have also broken up several major theft networks, according to Prosecutor Francois Molins, who paid a special visit to the Champs-Elysees tourist district Thursday to show how seriously police are taking crime against visitors.

Paris has also heightened security since the January attacks against the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo and a kosher supermarket that left 20 dead, including the three attackers.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. The French need an NRA. If all those tourists were packing heat, the pickpockets would….um, okay, maybe that isn’t the right angle on this.

  2. Avatar for dnl dnl says:

    The NRA is eternally grateful to OBL and President Obama for the fear and loathing that has increased weapons sales dramatically.

  3. Funny thing, if you travel at all in Europe you realize there are lots of criminals there—pickpockets, flimflam artists, all that sort of thing. You have to be careful about it. But there are relatively few people who stick a gun in your ribs and take your money—they do it other, gun-free ways.

    For some reason.

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