The Guardian (USA)

Thousands of tractors block Berlin as farmers protest over fuel subsidy cuts

- Kate Connolly in Berlin

Thousands of tractors have brought Berlin’s city centre to a standstill as farmers from across Germany protested on parliament’s doorstep over rising costs and a plan to phase out agricultur­al fuel subsidies.

An estimated 30,000 protesters, including farmers supported by a wide range of representa­tives from other industries from fishing to gastronomy to logistics, blocked the streets around the government quarter on Monday with their vehicles, including lorries and forklift trucks, and even children’s toy tractors.

Joachim Rukwied, the president of the German farmers’ union, called on the government to scrap its plans to phase out fuel subsidies, warning that many farmers would be driven to bankruptcy by the decision.

“The government has the ability to change this,” he told thousands of protesters gathered at the Brandenbur­g Gate, adding: “This much is too much. Take back the proposals.” As soon as the government signalled it was prepared to backtrack, Rukwied promised, “the tractors will be withdrawn”.

Christian Lindner, the finance minister and the main force behind the decision to cut the fuel subsidy, was greeted with loud boos and whistles as he took to the stage to address the rally.

“Your protest is legitimate and your protest is peaceful,” he told the protesters, praising their “cohesion”. But his words were hardly heard above the angry tumult.

He acknowledg­ed that anger among farmers went beyond the diesel subsidy. “Something has been brewing for decades,” he said. “We need to talk.” He added that a “new phase” had arrived, “in which we need to speak afresh about what the function of the state is”.

The demonstrat­ion marked the culminatio­n of a week of protests across the country that have attracted a growing number of workers from other fields, including thousands of trades people from heating engineers to plumbers, angry over high energy costs, mounting bureaucrac­y, high addon labour costs and a lack of consultati­on.

Representa­tives of the hospitalit­y industry in attendance are demanding the government withdraw its recent VAT increase on restaurant­s from 7% to 19%.

Entering the German capital on Sunday night, tractors blared their horns and shone headlights, with one farmer revving a chainsaw, prompting furious confrontat­ions between protesters and Berliners angry at having their sleep disrupted.

Similar, smaller-scale protests took place across the country, blocking main transport arteries. The protests also spread to storage and packing facilities belonging to Amazon, where workers have recently demonstrat­ed against allegedly poor working conditions, and the discount supermarke­t chain Aldi, in what were seen as expression­s of broader feelings of discontent towards the government.

The far-right populist Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d has been blamed for contributi­ng to the angry mood. Its accusation­s towards the government of cronyism, embezzleme­nt and warmongeri­ng were reflected in many of the banners and speeches visible on Monday.

Some protesters called for the dissolutio­n of government and for new elections, holding aloft lifesize models of government figurehead­s calling them the “hostage takers of our country”. Others held up the slogans: “Empty tanks – the game’s over”, “Without farmers there’s no future”, and “Transport made in Germany – but for how much longer?”

About 1,300 police were in attendance.

The agricultur­e minister, Cem Özdemir of the Greens, who has largely sided with the farmers, and blamed Lindner, of the pro-business Free Democratic party, for a poorly communicat­ed policy switch, told German television before the rally: “The problem is not just the question of agricultur­al diesel. The problem is that no one spoke to them about it.”

He said the protesters had finally achieved the feat of putting issues such as the pivotal role of farmers in the food supply chain at the top of the political agenda.

Some protesters had arrived with vehicles piled high with manure that they planned to dump at the door of the Bundestag, the parliament building close to Brandenbur­g Gate. But they were dissuaded from doing so in lastminute negotiatio­ns between police and organisers.

 ?? Bismarckst­rasse in Berlin. Photograph: Monika Skolimowsk­a/AP ?? A sign reading ‘We farmers take care of your food’ hangs on a tractor parked along
Bismarckst­rasse in Berlin. Photograph: Monika Skolimowsk­a/AP A sign reading ‘We farmers take care of your food’ hangs on a tractor parked along
 ?? Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters ?? The finance minister Christian Lindner (foreground) addressed the rally. Photograph:
Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters The finance minister Christian Lindner (foreground) addressed the rally. Photograph:

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