Berliner Tageblatt - Hardline farmers back in Brussels to protest EU policies

NYSE - LSE
CMSC 0.22% 22.37 $
NGG -1.56% 79.44 $
RBGPF -0.87% 60.61 $
RYCEF -0.16% 18.4 $
GSK -2.92% 50.67 $
BTI -0.98% 58.91 $
AZN -1.69% 174.93 $
BCE 0% 23.28 $
CMSD 0% 22.29 $
BP -2.66% 39.1 $
RIO -2.59% 100.08 $
VOD -1.61% 14.3 $
RELX -2.66% 31.18 $
BCC 5.16% 74.66 $
JRI 0.39% 12.67 $
Hardline farmers back in Brussels to protest EU policies
Hardline farmers back in Brussels to protest EU policies / Photo: © AFP

Hardline farmers back in Brussels to protest EU policies

Hundreds of tractors from across Europe rolled into Brussels on Tuesday in a protest spearheaded by hardline farmers' groups against EU green policies, days before elections across the bloc.

Text size:

Police said around 500 of the vehicles had gathered near the Atomium monument on the city outskirts, rallying to a call by the Dutch-founded group "Farmers Defence Force", with around 1,200 demonstrators present.

It was the latest in a string of farmer protests that have brought Brussels to a halt several times in recent months, but as of mid-afternoon there were no reports of incidents or disruption to traffic.

The FDF movement behind the protest is seen as close to the far-right, which has widely seized on farmer grievances in the run-up to the June 6-9 polls.

The farmers' mainstream pan-European group Copa-Cogeca, present in previous protests, stayed away from the event.

Several hard-right figures -- including from Poland's nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) and the Flemish Vlaams Belang -- were listed among the days' dozen speakers.

France's right-leaning Coordination Rurale farmers union said it was taking part in protest at the environmental demands of the EU's Common Agricultural Policy, as well as over-regulation and free-trade deals it said were "distorting competition".

Past farmer protests in Brussels, part of a months-long movement that roiled Europe early this year, have led to significant concessions in their favour, including a rollback of eco-friendly requirements in order to qualify for EU subsidies.

This time around, the farmers were given permission to demonstrate only in a specific area on the edge of Brussels. Police were deployed to prevent them from approaching the EU institutions at the heart of the capital.

F.Pavlenko--BTB