The Star Early Edition

Protest against crisis facing French farms

- Sybille de La Hamaide

PROTESTING French farmers converged on Paris in more than 1 500 tractors yesterday to demand more government action to stem a crisis in the meat and dairy sectors that has left some farms near bankruptcy in the EU’s top agricultur­al producer.

The demonstrat­ion, which slowed morning traffic on motorways around the French capital, follows a summer of protests by farmers exasperate­d by falling prices. It comes ahead of an EU farm ministers meeting on Monday to discuss the troubled livestock industry.

The government announced a relief package in July in a gesture to farmers who blocked roads, including access to the Mont Saint-Michel tourist site, and dumped manure outside supermarke­ts.

The FNSEA, France’s largest farmers’ union which called for yesterday’s protest, says the measures are insufficie­nt to help farmers facing the effects of a Russian embargo on Western products, as well as long-term problems linked to cheaper foreign competitio­n and the negotiatin­g power of supermarke­ts.

“We came to express our dismay. We can’t live from our job anymore,” said Patrice Jaouen, a 43-year-old dairy and vegetable farmer, leading a tractor convoy from Brittany after driving 588km since Tuesday. “We don’t want short-lived subsidies, we don’t want public money, we want an overhaul of the system.”

French farmers say they are hampered by higher social charges and stricter environmen­tal protection rules than their EU neighbours.

Tractors converged on Paris’s Place de la Nation, a regular venue for demonstrat­ions, ahead of a meeting between Prime Minister Manuel Valls and a delegation of farm union officials.

Police counted 1 580 tractors, 91 buses and 50 cars carrying farmers.

“We need visibility for our future, a decent revenue to support our families,” livestock farmer Philippe Nivost, 55, said, alongside the two cows he brought from central France.

The Socialist government has promised fresh measures would be announced yesterday to address farmer concerns. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? French farmers drive their tractors on the motorway outside Paris yesterday, calling for more help with low prices and high costs in the EU’s largest agricultur­al producer country.
PHOTO: REUTERS French farmers drive their tractors on the motorway outside Paris yesterday, calling for more help with low prices and high costs in the EU’s largest agricultur­al producer country.

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