Authorities across France are bracing for more riots and violence this weekend, holding emergency meetings and deploying tens of thousands of police and security forces.

Museums, theatres and shops in Paris announced they would close on Saturday as a precaution - including the city’s famed Eiffel Tower.

Police unions and city authorities met to strategise on how to handle the protests on Saturday, which are being held even though French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday cancelled the fuel tax hike that unleashed the unrest.

On the other side of France’s volatile social debate, disparate groups of protesters did the same thing, sharing their weekend plans on social networks and chat groups.

PARIS IS BURNING: The riots in pictures
Protesters overturn a vehicle on December 6 in Marseilles, during a demonstration of high school students protesting against French government education reforms.

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said the government would deploy 89,000 police officers across France (8000 in Paris alone) - up from 65,000 last weekend.

They will be equipped with a dozen armoured vehicles - a first in a French urban area since 2005. Some “yellow vest” protesters, French union officials and prominent politicians across the political spectrum called for calm on Thursday after the worst rioting in Paris in decades last weekend.

Macron agreed to abandon the fuel tax hike, part of his plans to combat global warming, but protesters’ demands have now expanded to other issues hurting French workers, retirees and students. And in a move questioned by both critics and supporters, the president himself has disappeared from public view. The prime minister reiterated the government’s plan to scrap a fuel tax rise planned by the previous government because of the “extreme tensions” France is facing.

“No tax deserves to put civil peace in danger,” Philippe said.

The rioting in Paris has worried tourists, prompted the cancellation of four French league soccer matches this weekend around the country and damaged the local economy at the height of the holiday shopping season.

Rampaging groups last weekend threw cobblestones through Paris storefronts and looted valuables in some of the city’s richest neighbourhoods.

The Eiffel Tower, along with more than a dozen museums, two theatres and other cultural sites in Paris, will be closed on Saturday for security reasons. The Paris Opera has cancelled performances, two music festivals in Paris have been postponed and the Arc de Triomphe remains closed since it was damaged in last weekend’s protest, which left over 130 people injured.

Paris police have also urged shops in the city’s high-end Champs-Elysees area to close as a precaution.

Protests simmered on Thursday in several French regions.

Scores of protesting teens clashed with police at a high school west of Paris, as part of nationwide student protests over new university admissions procedures and rising administrative fees. Drivers wearing their signature yellow safety vests continued to block roads around France, expanding their demands to include broader tax cuts and wider social benefits.

A small union representing police administrators called for a strike on Saturday, which could further complicate security measures. Two police union officials told The Associated Press they are worried that radical troublemakers from both the far right and far left will hijack Saturday’s protests.

Meanwhile, videos on social media of police beating protesters at a Burger King near the Champs-Elysees have stoked the protesters’ anger. A police spokeswoman said an investigation is underway into that incident and police are examining other videos circulating online for possible violations.

Macron, the central target of the protests, has been largely invisible all week. After winning election overwhelmingly last year, the 40-year-old pro-business centrist has sought to make France more competitive globally. But his efforts have alienated even some supporters with badly explained reforms like tax cuts for the rich to spur investment in France. Many protesters feel Macron has an elitist, out-of-touch attitude that ignores the country’s high taxes and high unemployment.

They felt the increased fuel tax in particular favoured wealthy city folk who use public transportation over poorer rural residents who must drive to work or school or shops.

Macron doesn’t face re-election until 2022 and his party has a strong majority in parliament, but his political opponents are increasingly vocal and plan a no-confidence vote in the government next week.

Philippe on Thursday rejected suggestions that he resign. He stressed that the lower house of parliament voted Wednesday in favour of the government’s measures to roll back a gas tax hike that had fuelled the unrest.

Clement Rozey, manager of a motorcycle shop in western Paris, spent two days and nights cleaning up after watching helplessly last weekend as thugs smashed his shop windows and emptied his shelves. He has boarded up the store and is among those staying closed on Saturday.

“We’re going to have a security company with security guards inside and outside the shop,” Rozey told the AP. “Everything has been fenced off, several times.” Yet he remains sympathetic to the protest movement.

“Just like everybody, we’re strangled (financially) after the 15th of the month,” he said, referring to the day when many French workers are paid. The protesters “are defending a cause, they’re following through and rightly so. We support them wholeheartedly.” But violent troublemakers who pillage and riot?

“That’s something else,” Rozey said.