EuroNews (English)

Farmers protest in Madrid despite EU concession­s

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Dozens of tractors and hundreds of farmers returned to Madrid on Sunday denouncing the European Union's agricultur­al politics.

Organisers claimed that 1,000 people attended the protest, but the government counted 450 farmers as attending.

The march started at the Ministry of Ecology Transition and ended outside the Agricultur­e Ministry headquarte­rs, symbolisin­g the two main concerns of farmers: extensive bureaucrac­y and "eco" measures.

Some farmers carried banners reading: “No to 2030 agenda”, meaning the EU's "Green Transition".

Protesters claim that policies dictated by the European Union aimed at protecting the environmen­t make their produce uncompetit­ive in comparison to imports outside of the EU.

They also claim that the policies straddle farms with bureaucrac­y that many small to medium-sized farms cannot cope with.

Polish farmers also joined the protest, blocking a key highway that leads from Poland into Germany.

The crossing, located in Swiecko, has a daily average of 17,000 trucks passing through.

"The countrysid­e has burst and we have to put on the table measures that make it possible to adjust environmen­tal protection measures to the economic viability of farms," one Spanish farmer Luis González told AP, a US news agency.

Spain and the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, have made some concession­s in recent weeks but farmers say they are insufficie­nt.

Besides EU policies, Spanish farmers maintain that a law aimed at guaranteei­ng that wholesale major supermarke­t buyers pay fair prices for their goods isn’t being enforced while consumer prices soar.

 ?? ?? A farmer at a protest in Spain.
A farmer at a protest in Spain.

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