New France pension strike as protests lose momentum
Public transport, including flights to and from Orly airport in Paris, are expected to be disrupted.
But support for the strikes is said to be waning after the National Assembly voted on Wednesday to raise the pension age by two years, from 60 to 62.
The bill faces a legal challenge before France's president can sign it off.
President Nicolas Sarkozy aims to sign the bill into law in November.
Disruption
Thursday will be the seventh day of action since the beginning of the dispute over pension reform.
Protest leaders are aiming to organise marches in about 100 French towns and cities, in concert with strikes by public sector unions.
Aviation officials predict half of flights at Paris Orly airport will be cancelled and 30% at other airports.
Trains, post offices, schools and public services will all be affected again.
Union leaders say they will also pursue the protest in other ways.
The final vote in parliament on Wednesday means pension reform is now inevitable - unless the president performs an unlikely u-turn, he adds.
The unions say the marches in Paris and all the provincial cities will be smaller than those seen in recent weeks.
They blame the half-term school break, but they also know the sprit of the protest has been drained by the unstoppable political process, our correspondent adds.
Rolling strikes and blockades at oil refineries are continuing and are now into a fourth week, continuing to inconvenience travellers and businesses.
Eleven of France's 12 refineries were closed on Wednesday and fuel imports into France have now risen to more than four times their normal levels; Kazinform cites BBC.
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