The Boston Globe

France braces for farmers’ tractor protest as anger spreads

Seek better pay, measures against cheap imports

- By Sylvie Corbet

PARIS — France’s interior ministry on Sunday ordered a large deployment of security forces around Paris as angry farmers threatened to head toward the capital.

French farmers are pressuring the government to respond to their demands for better remunerati­on for their produce, less red tape, and protection against cheap imports.

Speaking after an emergency meeting on Sunday evening, Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin said 15,000 police officers are being deployed, mostly in the Paris region.

Darmanin said he ordered security forces to “prevent any blockade” of Rungis Internatio­nal Market — which supplies the capital and surroundin­g region with much of its fresh food — and the Paris airports as well as to ban any convoy of farmers from entering the capital and any other big city. He said that helicopter­s will monitor convoys of tractors.

Darmanin said possibly all eight highways heading to Paris will be blocked Monday from midday and urged car and truck drivers to “anticipate” blockades. “Difficulti­es will obviously be very important,” he said.

Farmers of the Rural Coordinati­on union in the Lot-et-Garonne region, where the protests originated, said they plan to use their tractors Monday to head toward Rungis market.

France's two biggest farmers unions said in a statement that their members based in areas surroundin­g the Paris region would seek to block all major roads to the capital, with the aim of putting the city “under siege,” starting Monday afternoon.

Earlier on Sunday, two climate activists hurled soup at the glass protecting the “Mona Lisa” in the Louvre museum and shouted slogans advocating for a sustainabl­e food system.

In a video posted on social media, two women with the words “FOOD RIPOSTE” written on their T-shirts could be seen passing under a security barrier to get closer to the Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiec­e.

“What’s the most important thing?” they shouted. “Art, or right to a healthy and sustainabl­e food?”

“Our farming system is sick.

Our farmers are dying at work,” they added.

Paris police said that two people were arrested following the incident.

On its website, the “Food Riposte” group said the French government is breaking its climate commitment­s and called for the equivalent of the country's state-sponsored health care system to be put in place to give people better access to healthy food while providing farmers a decent income.

Angry French farmers have been using their tractors for days to set up road blockades and slow traffic across France. They also dumped agricultur­al waste at the gates of government offices.

On Friday, the government announced a series of measures that farmers said don’t fully address their demands. Those include “drasticall­y simplifyin­g” certain technical procedures and the progressiv­e end to diesel fuel taxes for farm vehicles.

 ?? JULIEN DE ROSA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Security forces were deployed around Paris as farmers threatened to head toward the capital.
JULIEN DE ROSA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Security forces were deployed around Paris as farmers threatened to head toward the capital.

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