The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Thousands oppose EU-U.S. trade deal

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Tens of thousands of people marched through downtown Berlin on Saturday to protest a planned trans-Atlantic free trade pact. Police said around 100,000 took part in the demonstrat­ion, while organizers claimed 250,000 turned out, banging on drums, chanting slogans and waving signs and flags opposing the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnershi­p, or TTIP. Germany’s government has pushed the deal, saying it will boost the global economy and give smaller and mid-sized companies a better chance at competing on the world market while reducing bureaucrac­y. Protesters, organized by the Confederat­ion of German Trade Unions, known by its acronym DGB, worry that an agreement could lower food safety standards and undermine local regulation­s by giving internatio­nal arbitratio­n panels the power to rule over disputes. The European Union and United States have been negotiatin­g since 2013 on TTIP and supporters hope it will gain momentum now that the U.S., Japan and other Pacific Rim nations have reached an agreement on a separate trade deal.

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