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PROTESTS

Hundreds of tractors descend on Barcelona on second day of Spain’s farmer protests

Thousands of farmers used tractors to block roads across Spain on Wednesday for the second day running, with farmers in Barcelona attempting to bring the city to a standstill by blocking its city centre and main access point.

Hundreds of tractors descend on Barcelona on second day of Spain's farmer protests
Farmers drive their tractors during a protest over farmers conditions ans European agricultural policy on the highway, north of Barcelona, on February 7, 2024. (Photo by Pau Barrena / AFP)

Farmers gathered at dawn on dozens of roads, snarling traffic, mainly in Andalusia in the south and the northeastern region of Catalonia and Navarra in the north, according to the Spanish General Directorate for Road Traffic (DGT).

In Catalonia, farmers from Lleida, Girona and Tarragona are slowly taking their tractors to Barcelona with the aim of causing gridlock on the main access roads to the Catalan capital and in the city centre, before meeting in front of the headquarters of the regional government.

There farming representatives will meet with Catalan president Pere Aragonès and the regional climate action, food and rural affairs minister David Mascort. 

So far, farmers have been welcomed with applauses from bystanders in the Catalan capital.

Murcia, Extremadura, Navarra, La Rioja, Castilla y León, Valencia , Castilla-La Mancha, Aragón and Andalusia are the nine other regions affected by the protests so far, with more set to follow in the coming days.

Farmers plan to block Barcelona with tractors in a mass protest against European agricultural policy. (Photo by Pau Barrena / AFP)

 

Tractors were used to block roads leading to the southern port of Málaga in Andalusia, authorities said.

MAP: Where are farmers blocking roads on Wednesday?

Spain’s three main agricultural unions, Asaja, Coag and UPA, did not initiate the demonstrations which began on Tuesday. T

hey have planned other protests this week, including Thursday in Salamanca in the northwest and Friday in the northern city of Bilbao.

Angry farmers have been protesting across Europe over rising costs, high fuel prices, bureaucracy and the environmental requirements in the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and its forthcoming “Green Deal”.

The three unions – who say the CAP is too complex and allows unfair foreign competition – held emergency talks on Friday with Agriculture Minister Luis Planas, who agreed to work on a response.

READ ALSO: How long will the farmers’ roadblocks in Spain last?

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez told parliament on Wednesday that he was “on the side of the farmers” and highlighted measures his government has adopted in recent years to support the sector, especially in the face of a long drought.

He vowed to simplify rules for the implementation of the CAP, and to improve laws aimed at preventing farmers from selling products at a loss.

Spain is one of Europe’s leading producers of fruit and vegetables.

But its agricultural sector faces difficulties, largely due to a lack of rainfall that has plagued the Iberian peninsula for the last three years.

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PROTESTS

Spanish farmers stage fresh protests in Madrid

Hundreds of farmers paraded through the Spanish capital on foot and by tractor on Sunday in the latest protest over the crisis facing the agricultural sector.

Spanish farmers stage fresh protests in Madrid

The farmers marched from the Ministry of Ecological Transition to the Ministry of Agriculture after the European Union proposed legislative changes to drastically ease the environmental rules of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) Friday.

Rallied by their trade union, farmers carried banners proclaiming “We are not delinquents” to the sound of horns and whistles. One decorated his tractor with a mock guillotine.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: Why are farmers in Spain protesting?

“It is as if they want to cut off our necks,” said Marcos Baldominos explaining his guillotine.

“We are being suffocated by European rules,” the farmer from Pozo de Guadalajara, 50 kilometres (30 miles) east of Madrid, added.

Friday’s concessions in Brussels aimed to loosen compliance with some environment rules, EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said. While the move was welcomed by Spain’s left-wing government, some environmental NGOs criticised the measures.

“We are faced with a pile of bureaucratic rules that make us feel more like we are at an office than on a farm,” the trade union behind Sunday’s march, Union de Uniones, said with reference to requirements “that many small and medium-sized farms” cannot “cope with”.

Sunday marked the fourth demonstration in Madrid since the start of the wider European farm protest movement in mid-January.

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