EuroNews (English)

Farmers in Romania, France and Germany continue road convoy protests

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Farmers' protests have sprung up in Romania, Germany and France, ahead of the EU elections in June.

Whilst their demands vary in general they claim that they are taking the hardest hit from environmen­tal reforms and that they need more government subsidies to offset them.

Romania

In Romania, farmers and truckers have been clogging up main roads with their tractor and trucks for a week and a half now.

They're demanding lower taxes and fairer subsidies, but so far talks with the government have failed, and they're continuing to protest. They're also angry over the growing cost of insurance for heavy machinery.

Germany

In Berlin on Saturday, farmers were joined shoulder-to-shoulder with eco-activists.

Farmers say that they are fully supportive of environmen­tally friendly, geneticall­y unmodified farming, but for that, they do need subsidies or, at least, fair prices set for their products.

But they say, the government has hesitated to implement such measures despite handing their demands to the agricultur­e minister Cem Özdemir.

The farmers have been on the streets since December, when the federal government agreed on a budget cancelling several decadesold farming subsidies and benefits. These could have saved farmers over 480 million euros. Later, Berlin decided to soften the plans, by making the benefit cuts gradual.

France

In southern France, mass protests over the past few days have forced the government to address farmers' issues. Prime Minister Gabriel Attal will meet on Monday with the president of the National Federation of Agricultur­al Operators' Unions or FNSEA.

Earlier, farmers vowed to block some motorways until Attal heard their demands. The FNSEA has said it will decide next week whether they will call for nationwide action.

Farmers in Germany decry plans to scrap diesel tax breaks Romanian truckers and farmers continue to protest after talks with the government fail

The farmers say that authoritie­s' eco-transition policies make national producers uncompetit­ive. Not only does it make farms unprofitab­le, it forces France to buy food products from countries where environmen­tal standards are weaker they claim.

 ?? ?? Farmers with tractors arrive for a protest at the government district in Berlin, Germany, Monday, Jan 15, 2024.
Farmers with tractors arrive for a protest at the government district in Berlin, Germany, Monday, Jan 15, 2024.

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