No surprise perhaps to seem them on the streets, but French farmers have begun blocking motorways and targeting government buildings to express anger over rising costs and what they call suffocating red tape at both a national and EU level.
“To attain our
objectives, violence is not the answer, but some farmers have simply had
enough,” said Arnaud Rousseau, head of the country’s biggest farmers’ union,
FNSEA, on France Inter radio on Monday. He promised further demonstrations
until farmers’ concerns were addressed.
The government has said for months it would introduce
legislation to help farmers but on Sunday pushed back the proposal for a few
weeks, saying it wanted to improve it. The movement in France, the
biggest agricultural producer in the EU and a main recipient of the bloc’s
Common Agricultural Policy subsidies, comes as similar protests have occurred
in recent weeks in Germany, the Netherlands, Poland and Romania. In the Netherlands, farmer discontent over fertiliser
curbs helped boost an insurgent party..
Although farmers’ rage has sometimes been touched off by
national measures such as a fuel tax subsidy cut in Germany, there is also a broad
consensus against the EU’s “farm to fork” strategy that aims to reduce
pesticide use and impose new rules to take climate change into account in
farming practices.
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