The Eiffel Tower will be closed on Saturday due to planned protests in the French capital, the site's operator said.
'The demonstrations in Paris do not allow us to welcome visitors in safe conditions,' SETE said in a statement.
About a dozen museums, including the Grand Palais, cultural sites such as the Opera and shops in central Paris have also been ordered by police to close over fears of violence.
It comes as Emmanuel Macron's popularity has crashed to its lowest ever and lawmakers are discussing a vote of no confidence in the French President's government amid fresh riots across the country today.
The 40-year-old head of state's popularity rating fell below the 20 per cent mark as thousands of so-called Yellow Vests continued to demonstrate against his administration.
Protesters wearing yellow vests, a symbol of a French drivers' protest against higher diesel taxes, during a demonstration at the Place de l'Etoile with the Eiffel Tower in the background
Emmanuel Macron's popularity has crashed to its lowest ever and lawmakers are discussing a vote of no confidence in the French President amid fresh riots across the country today. This was the scene in Marseille today during a student protest over school reforms
Macron's popularity rating has fallen below the 20 per cent mark as thousands of so-called Yellow Vests continued to demonstrate against his administration. A man is pictured squirting fuel on an overturned vehicle in Marseille during another protest
Riot police officers walk past burning debris as they move through the streets amid protests in the southern city of Marseille
Police made a series of arrests today as they looked to clamp down on rioting in Marseille. A man is pictured lying face down on the ground with officers standing over him in the street
Some 200 high schools were blocked or disrupted by students protesting a raft of education overhauls, on a fourth day of action. Dozens of people wearing face masks threw Molotov cocktails, torched trash bins and clashed with police in several cities during violent protests.
A spokesman for Mr Macron warned of 'great violence' this weekend and Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said 'exceptional measures' would be in place in addition to the deployment of 65,000 security officers across France. Paris police has also urged shops and restaurants on the Champs-Elysees to close on Saturday.
Earlier, left-wing opposition parties revealed they were seeking a no-confidence vote in Macron's government amid growing protests and fears of violence.
The Socialist Party, far-left Defiant France and the Communist Party are setting aside their divisions and promising to submit the request to the lower house of parliament, or National Assembly, on Monday. The assembly would hold a no-confidence motion within 48 hours of the request.
The left-wing parties alone don't have nearly enough votes to bring down the government, since Macron's centrist Republic on the Move party has a strong majority in the 577-seat house. But they are trying to attract support from other opposition forces.
The move is a new swipe at Macron and his government, dramatically weakened by weeks of 'yellow vest' protests.
Despite a humiliating government U-turn on proposed green taxes on fuels, the Yellow Vests sense they can achieve more.
The group is named after the high visibility jackets that all motorists have to carry in France, and originally called for a reduction in the price of diesel and petrol.
Now disgruntled groups from Left and Right, including students and emergency workers, have joined their campaign.
This has ensured that Mr Macron's approval rating is now just 18 per cent, according to a new poll by YouGov for France's HuffPost and Cnews outlets.
It was conducted the day before Saturday's riots, with 1,006 people making up a representative sample of the French population quizzed. The 18 per cent figure represents a drop of three points, and the third consecutive decline in three months.
Mr Macron came to power in May 2017 as an independent, pledging to reform the country's sluggish economy and to introduce ecological measures in line with the Paris Climate Change agreement.
But the former merchant banker is now described as 'The President of the Rich', and widely disliked.
Macron issued an 'appeal for calm', as another day of action is planned for Saturday, not just in Paris but in other major cities and towns.
Firefighters try to extinguish a car set on fire by protesters in Marseille, southern France, today. Some 200 French high schools were blocked or disrupted by students protesting a raft of education overhauls, on a fourth day of action
France's prime minister is promising 'exceptional' security measures for protests planned in Paris and around the country on Saturday, amid fears that radicals and troublemakers will take advantage of the moment to seed chaos. This was the scene during education reform protests in Marseille today
French authorities warned another wave of 'great violence' and rioting could be unleashed in Paris this weekend by a hard core of 'yellow vest' protesters, as senior ministers sought to defuse public anger with conciliatory languages on taxes. A protester runs past a burning barricade in Marseille today
Riot police officers stand in position next to burning debris as they advance up a street during protests in Marseille today
French riot police face off with youths and high school students during a protest against the French government's reform plan, in Bordeaux, France, today
This was the scene in Bordeaux as protesters wheeled bins on to fires and created road blocks in a demonstration over reform plans
Students set fire to a wheelie bin which quickly spread to the main building at the Lycee Saint-Exupery High School in Blagnac in Toulouse earlier this week
The reception of Lycee Saint-Exupery High School in Toulouse was gutted while the science department also suffered extensive damage
Horrifying images of French police beating up protestors have emerged, and these have inflamed an already hugely tense situation.
Macron's prime minister, Edouard Philippe, said: 'What is at stake is the safety of the French people and our institutions. I call for responsibility.
'All the actors in the public debate – politicians, union leaders, journalists and citizens – will be accountable for their statements in the coming days.'
Social media is currently full of appeals for people to mass around the Champs Elysees in Paris on Saturday, to create disorder. It will mean the fourth day of disturbances in a row, leading it to be dubbed 'Act 4'.
The 'yellow vest' protests began on November 17 in opposition to rising fuel taxes, but they have since ballooned into a broad challenge to Macron's pro-business agenda and style of governing.
The government announced Wednesday it would cancel planned increases in fuel tax due to take effect in January in a bid to appease the mostly low-income protesters from small-town and rural France.
'With the yellow vests as a pretext, we're seeing all sorts of individuals joining with people demonstrating in good faith, including students, and this is leading to serious violence,' Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer told BFM television.
At least two cars were burned outside a school in Mantes-la-Jolie northwest of the capital on Thursday, while a student was seriously injured by a rubber bullet fired by police in the central city of Orleans.
The main farmers' union said Wednesday that its members would hold demonstrations every day next week.
Two truck driver unions have also called an indefinite sympathy strike from Sunday night, while blockades at fuel depots have caused shortages in Brittany, Normandy, and southeast regions of France.
A protester holds a placard reading 'Future of high school students' in front of riot police officers during a demonstration of high school students protesting against French government Education reforms in Marseille today
Youths and high school students cheer as they look at a vandalized tramway stop during a protest against the French government's reform plan, in Bordeaux today
Riot police officers stand guard in front of a police headquarters during a demonstration of high school students in Marseille today
Protesters were seen hurling stones towards police from behind a burning pile of debris in the road in Marseille today
French police wore body armour and shields as they moved into disperse rioters in the southern French city of Marseille today
France remains on edge after the 'yellow vest' protests degenerated into some of the worst violence in decades in central Paris last Saturday. Dozens of cars were burned, more than 400 people arrested and the Arc de Triomphe was daubed in graffiti
France remains on edge after the 'yellow vest' protests degenerated into some of the worst violence in decades in central Paris last Saturday. Dozens of cars were burned, more than 400 people arrested and the Arc de Triomphe was daubed in graffiti.
Officials fear more violence this weekend after organisers called for new demonstrations, saying Macron's decision to cancel fuel tax increases and other concessions were not enough.
Prime Minister Edouard Philippe told senators Thursday that 'exceptional measures' would be in place on Saturday in addition to the deployment of 65,000 security forces across France.
On Thursday a yellow-vest representative, Benjamin Cauchy, called on Macron to meet a delegation of protesters Friday to help calm a situation that he said had brought the country 'to the brink of insurrection and civil war.'
'We're asking him to meet us to negotiate on spending power, which is what underpins all this anger,' Cauchy told AFP.
Four people have died in accidents linked to the protests since they began on November 17, and hundreds have been injured.
Macron has not commented publicly since Saturday on the deepest crisis of his presidency so far.
Dozens of people wearing face masks threw Molotov cocktails, torched trash bins and clashed with police in several cities during violent protests ahead of a call for nationwide demonstrations on Friday. This was the scene in Bordeaux today
Macron and his government have appealed for calm, and signalled they are ready to make further concessions to avoid new violence after the U-turn on fuel tax increases. Police are pictured during riots in Bordeaux today
Two more French league soccer matches have been postponed amid security concerns about anti-government protests across the country. The newly delayed matches are Monaco against Nice and Saint-Etienne against Marseille. Rioters are pictured in Marseille today
People had to protect themselves from tear gas during clashes with riot police in Marseille in southern France, today
Despite last weekend's violence, attributed by many to vandals intent on rioting, public support for the yellow vests has remained stable, with an opinion poll this week showing 72 per cent backed the movement.
Several museums near the Champs-Elysees and the Arc de Triomphe, which was severely damaged during the violence, said they will remain closed Saturday, and some schools in the area have called off Saturday classes.
A Paris Saint-Germain football game against Montpellier scheduled for Saturday has also been postponed after a request by Paris police.
Labour unions are also meeting Thursday to weigh their response to the movement, which has billed itself as a grassroots protest unaligned with any political party or union.
Macron and his government have appealed for calm, and signalled they are ready to make further concessions to avoid new violence after the U-turn on fuel tax increases.
But Macron's office said he told ministers he would stick to his decision to cut a 'fortune tax' on high-earners, which the former investment banker abolished last year.
Restoring the wealth tax has become one of the core demands of the 'yellow vests,' alongside the fuel tax rollback and an increase in the minimum wage.
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News Pictures Paris will close the Eiffel Tower due to anti-government riots
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