The Daily Telegraph

Farmers call off protests as Paris strikes deal

Blockade of capital ends after French government announces law clamping down on food imports

- By Henry Samuel in Paris

FRANCE’S two main farming unions yesterday called for blockades of Paris and other cities to be suspended after the government announced a clamp down on food imports.

“We have decided that at present, given everything that has been announced... we need to change our methods of action, and so we are calling on our networks... to suspend the blockades and embark on a new form of mobilisati­on,” said Arnaud Gaillot, head of the Jeunes Agriculteu­rs (Young Farmers) union, alongside Arnaud Rousseau, the FNSEA boss.

The two unions had joined forces to block all main entrances to Paris this week, while a smaller union, Co-ordination Rurale, mounted more militant action by seeking to storm Europe’s biggest fresh food market, Rungis, leading to 91 arrests.

The call to end the blockade came after Gabriel Attal, the prime minister, announced that France would protect its farmers from “the law of the jungle” by becoming self-reliant in food while tightening import controls. With 1,300 tractors converging on the European Parliament in Brussels from across the Continent to protest environmen­tal regulation­s, Mr Attal said he wanted to “better recognise the farming profession”, “protect against unfair competitio­n” and “give value back to our food”.

Emmanuel Macron, the French president, was in Brussels to hold talks with Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission chief, to discuss “the future of European agricultur­e” before an EU summit there yesterday.

After the conference, Mr Macron told reporters France had managed to persuade the EU to “impose stricter rules” for cereal and poultry imports, including from Ukraine. He called for “concrete and tangible simplifica­tion” of EU red tape “from the end of February”.

Speaking in France, meanwhile, Mr Attal offered measures including an annual €150million (£128million) for livestock farmers and a ban on food imports treated with thiaclopri­d, a neonicotin­oid pesticide already banned in France.

He added that the government would stop imposing stricter environmen­tal regulation­s than the EU requires.

Pledging to protect agricultur­e “against the law of the jungle and unfair competitio­n”, he also ruled out a trade deal with South American countries that farmers fear will undercut them.

He also vowed to ensure a clear Europewide definition of lab-grown meat.

Bruno Le Maire, the finance minister, added that all major supermarke­ts will be audited for compliance with a law that is supposed to ensure fair prices for farmers’ produce.

And there will be a pause in France’s national plan for reducing pesticide use, said Marc Fesneau, the agricultur­e minister.

Mr Rousseau, of FNSEA, said that after “a botched and incomplete exercise” by Mr Attal last Friday, “we have been heard on a number of points, with tangible progress. But there are also things that are not there and that need to be clarified”.

In particular, Mr Rousseau said he was “sensitive to the announceme­nt of emergency measures concerning LNG, health and climate compensati­on, and the rapid payment of the latest subsidies” as part of the Common Agricultur­al Policy, or CAP.

The president of France’s largest farmers’ union also welcomed Mr Attal’s pledge to move “in the direction of sovereignt­y, production and an agricultur­al policy that is self-sufficient”. While reaffirmin­g his “attachment to Europe”, Mr Rousseau went on to denounce its penchant for technocrac­y and deafness, with “decisions taken from afar that do not respect the work of farmers”.

“We obviously understand that European projects can take time, and that we can’t change the rules in a matter of days, but at this point in time, it is essential that the heads of state and government understand that if we want to protect Europe... then we need to be able to do so with men and women who want to move forward,” said Mr Rousseau.

“This battle for our agricultur­e, for all of us, is intimately linked to the future of what is happening in Europe.”

At a time when the European Commission has proposed measures to limit imports of Ukrainian agricultur­al products, Mr Rousseau said: “We have dithered for more than a year on the issue of agricultur­al imports, and we are now waiting for strong decisions that will protect the European domestic market.”

Mr Gaillot said: “From Monday onwards, we are going to get to work in the prefecture­s and ministries to work on all the points that have been announced, to see how they are being applied and how we can ensure that they are actually put into practice on the ground.”

He said union leaders are asking for a document summarisin­g the announceme­nts, as well “for this law [on agricultur­al policy] to be passed through parliament, and for the whole European part to be put into action”.

If there is no progress, he added: “We will not hesitate to join in a widespread protest movement.”

‘This battle for our agricultur­e is intimately linked to the future of what is happening in Europe’

 ?? ?? The toppled statue of John Cockerill, a British steel baron, lies on its side in the Place du Luxembourg, right, during protests by Belgian farmers in Brussels, below; Emmanuel Macron addresses a press conference at the meeting of the European Council, below right
The toppled statue of John Cockerill, a British steel baron, lies on its side in the Place du Luxembourg, right, during protests by Belgian farmers in Brussels, below; Emmanuel Macron addresses a press conference at the meeting of the European Council, below right
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