The Daily Telegraph

Farmers lay siege to Paris with vow to cut off food

Capital only has supplies for three days as tractor protest blocks main roads into city

- By Henry Samuel in Chennevièr­es-lès-louvres

HUNDREDS of tractors laid siege to Paris yesterday as farmers furious at French and European rules said they intended to “starve Parisians”.

Long lines of tractors blocked motorways at eight entry points to the city as one militant union promised to take control of the world’s biggest fresh food market. “[Blockading Paris] will happen naturally. Parisians are going to be hungry. The goal is to starve Parisians. That’s it", said Benoît Durand, a grain farmer.

Mr Durand, like thousands of others in his industry, said he was suffering from low income, red tape and environmen­tal policies pushing costs up. President Emmanuel Macron, who is under pressure to reassert his authority, is expected to announce new measures for farmers as early as today, the Elysée said.

The protests follow similar action in other European countries, including Germany and Poland, ahead of European Parliament elections in June in which the hard-right are making gains.

The main farming unions do not support strangling Paris’s food supplies but last night angry farmers refused to move, setting up barbecues on motorways and sleeping in trailers.

In the event of major disruption, Paris would only have three days of food supplies, according to government agency Ademe.

A group of 90 tractors left Agen, in south-west France, yesterday morning with the aim of “occupying” the Rungis food market, where more than 8,000 tons of goods pass through to feed nearly 12million people every day.

The tractors were due to reach the market, nicknamed “the belly of Paris”, by tonight or tomorrow at the latest. Their ranks were expected to swell considerab­ly along the way. About 10,000 farmers and 5,000 farm vehicles were taking part in action around the country, French police sources said.

Armoured military vehicles were dispatched to the market and 15,000 police and gendarmes were deployed around the country to prevent tractors from entering Paris and other major cities.

Gérald Darmanin, the interior minister, said he had ordered security forces to show moderation, but also warned farmers not to cross certain red lines. These included cutting off Paris’s main airports or Rungis. “We don’t intend to allow government buildings, or tax collection buildings, or grocery stores to be damaged or trucks transporti­ng foreign produce to be stopped. Obviously, that is unacceptab­le,” he said.

The government has tried to appease the protesters with a string of concession­s. On Friday, it dropped plans to gradually reduce state subsidies on agricultur­al diesel and promised a reduction in red tape and an easing of environmen­tal regulation­s.

Spirits were high last night on the A1 highway at Chennevièr­es-lès-louvres within sight of Roissy Charles de Gaulle airport, 15 miles (25km) north of Paris.

As night fell, farmers warmed their hands around bonfires and barbecued sausages as they sipped wine and beer. Behind, their tractors formed an impregnabl­e convoy blocking off the capital. As fires raged, Soft Cell’s hit song Tainted Love and Madness’s One Step Beyond blasted over the farmers’ sound system as they ate beef burgers

and temperatur­es approached zero. “We’re here because we’ve had enough, we want to defend our pay. We’ve had enough of all the excessive red tape that’s even worse in France than the rest of Europe,” said Robin Leduc, 30, who runs a 200-hectare farm in Canly not far from the tractor checkpoint.

“The government has to act fast then we can all go home as we have work to do on our farms.”

Mr Leduc said he had found an unlikely British ally in the shape of Jeremy Clarkson, who has gained plaudits for the Amazon Prime series Clarkson’s Farm, which charts his attempts at running a 1,000-acre farm in the Cotswolds.

“We need a French celebrity to do the same as Jeremy Clarkson. Everything he explains in it is why we are here today. You may have left the EU, but we share many of the same problems regarding all these environmen­tal rules.”

The government has been trying to keep discontent among farmers from spreading before European Parliament elections in June, seen as a key test for Mr Macron’s government.

Yesterday, the French government said it would push its EU peers to agree to ease regulation­s on fallow farmland. Farmers must meet certain conditions to receive EU subsidies, including a requiremen­t to devote 4 per cent of farmland to “non-productive” areas where nature can recover.

With cheap imports a burning issue, Mr Macron’s office said he had told the European Commission it was impossible to conclude trade deal negotiatio­ns with South America’s Mercosur bloc. The president’s office believes it has an understand­ing that the EU has put an end to the talks.

The French president will make a push for more pro-farming policies at an EU summit on Thursday. Henri Haquin, 43, who runs a 300-hectare farm in Bregy, north of Paris, said: “We get the feeling that Brussels doesn’t understand what we do and comes up with new laws every month that are difficult to understand and work with.”

He also has a real estate business to make ends meet, saying he will not make a profit from his farm until he has paid off bank loans in a decade.

“We fear for the new generation­s. The problem is unfair competitio­n, lots of products from elsewhere without the same norms,” he said. “This is the only way we’ve found to get the government going”. However, he insisted: “We don’t want to starve Parisians. Only a small minority wants to block Rungis.

“For now, 90 per cent of the French are behind us. If we do that we’ll lose that support.” Véronique Le Floc’h, of the hard-right-leaning Coordinati­on Rurale union, said farmers would target the Rungis market to “show the consequenc­es if there are no more farmers tomorrow”.

In neighbouri­ng Belgium, farmers stepped up their own campaign against red tape, including disrupting motorway traffic at the Daussoulx interchang­e near Namur. Farmers prepare a barbecue lunch during their blockage of a road in Halle, Belgium, where protests were also held to demand better conditions for their industry

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom