Protesting Spanish farmers clog Madrid with hundreds of tractors

Several hundred tractors began to converge to the centre of Madrid, on a new day of mobilisation of Spanish farmers, who are denouncing the competition deemed unfair from certain countries outside the EU. Picture: OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP

Several hundred tractors began to converge to the centre of Madrid, on a new day of mobilisation of Spanish farmers, who are denouncing the competition deemed unfair from certain countries outside the EU. Picture: OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP

Published Feb 21, 2024

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Hundreds of tractors began converging on Madrid Wednesday for a new day of protests by Spanish farmers angered by what they say is unfair competition from outside the EU.

Called by the Union of Unions syndicate, the demonstrators began gathering at dawn at various locations near the Spanish capital carrying signs demanding "fair prices" for their products, AFP correspondents said.

Five columns of tractors were seen heading to the city centre where demonstrators were due to gather in front of the agriculture ministry.

"We have to protest in Madrid, because that's where everyone is. And we also have to upset things a bit," said Jose Angel Lopez, a farmer from Pancorbo, a town about 100 kilometres south of the northern port city of Bilbao.

Officials said they had granted permission to some 500 tractors to enter the city for the latest in a string of protests that farmers and livestock breeders have been holding across Spain since February 1.

What they want is to be able "to include the production costs in the end product so they don't end up selling their goods at a loss," top union representative Luis Cortes told TVE public television.

Imported products should be subjected to "the same conditions that Spanish farmers have to face", said Cortes, referring to goods imported from non-EU countries where farmers don't have to face the same strict rules and regulations as they do within the bloc.

Demonstrators point to the red tape and the environmental requirements in the EU's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and its forthcoming "Green Deal".

A string of measures announced last week by Spain's left-wing government did not go far enough to address the problems, Cortes said.

Other protests convened by Spain's three main agricultural unions Asaja, COAG and UPA were taking place simultaneously in other areas such as Malaga and Murcia in the south, Caceres in the west and Palencia in the north.

Last week, union representatives held talks with Agriculture Minister Luis Planas who pledged to ask the EU to simplify the CAP and to ask Brussels and the World Trade Organization to ensure that imported products respect the bloc's agricultural rules.

He also pledged to improve legislation governing Spain's agri-food chain so that producers are not forced to sell their products at a loss.

The European Commission has also made concessions in recent weeks to farmers protesting in several countries across Europe, ahead of elections to the European Parliament in early June.

IOL