French Farmers Blockade Roads Into Paris
Kicking off the “Siege of Paris” last Monday, thousands of farmers took to their tractors in a coordinated attempt to block off entrances to the French capital in protest against globalist ‘green’ policies they say are destroying their ability to stay in business
In an escalation of the latest example of popular uprisings that have come to define President Macron’s tenure in office, farmers descended in their tractors to shut down major highways leading into Paris on Monday following a week of similar protests throughout the country.
According to the Le Figaro newspaper, farmers successfully enacted blockades on eight major highways, with tractors lined up for tens of kilometers around the ring road surrounding Paris.
In total, 16 highways and 30 administrative departments around the city were impacted by the demonstrations on Monday, while separate farmer uprisings continued in at least 40 other locations throughout the country.
Sur l’autoroute #A4, le #BlocusDeParis a commencé. Au niveau de #Jossigny, des tracteurs ont été positionnés dans les deux sens de circulation. Les #AgriculteursEnColere sont prêts à y rester pour une durée indéterminée. pic.twitter.com/YX3MQBSVLR
— CLPRESS / Agence de presse (@CLPRESSFR) January 29, 2024
President Emmanuel Macron will reportedly hold an emergency meeting with his government ministers at the Élysée on Monday to be briefed on the “overview of the agricultural situation”.
Meanwhile, Gabriel Attal, who was installed as France’s youngest-ever prime minister earlier this month by Macron, will reportedly hold crunch negotiations with the leader of the FNSEA farmer’s union Arnaud Rousseau, and the head of the Young Farmers Arnaud Gaillot on Monday evening.
The “Siege of Paris” was called for over the weekend after Prime Minister Attal’s attempts to quell the anger of the farmers with several “concessions” were rejected for not going far enough.
It is unclear exactly how many of the farmer’s 140 demands the French government can meet, given that many of the stifling ‘green’-agenda regulations were imposed by the EU.
However, farmers’ groups and populist politicians have noted that Macron’s party in Brussels was a principal backer of the ‘climate change’ cause and, therefore, is still to blame.
#BlocusDeParis, sur l’autoroute #A15, le point de blocage des #AgriculteursEnColere est en place depuis 14h ce jour. Un barrage policier est présent pour empêcher les #Agriculteurs d’avancer plus proche de #Paris. pic.twitter.com/Z7d0QtAurT
— CLPRESS / Agence de presse (@CLPRESSFR) January 29, 2024
Speaking from a blockade outside Paris on Monday, the president of the FDSEA farmer’s union in Yvelines, Luc Janottin said:
“We want to tell Mr Attal that he must work for his subjects rather than going for walks on the farms. France could suspend overnight all the environmental standards that complicate our lives and we expect it to do so!”
Janottin said that the purpose of the protests was not to “annoy motorists” and that the farmers would allow people to move through the blockades, saying:
“The Paris blockade is just an image. We are not going to completely stop people from moving around. Above all, we want to show our presence, to say that we are tired of doing paperwork rather than our job.”
In addition to targeting Paris, at least 80 tractors enacted a blockade of the A7 highway and elsewhere outside Lyon, where local farmers have also spoken of a “siege” of the city.
Critical roads leading into Marseille, including the A7 and A55 motorways were subject to “snail operations” local officials said, adding that the A50 is “currently at a complete standstill”.
Les agriculteurs du Lot-et-Garonne sont accueillis sous les applaudissements et les bénédictions à Bergerac (24) et prennent la direction de la capitale.#AgriculteursEnColere #BlocusDeParis #BlocusRungis #Bergerac pic.twitter.com/CeUGwtAQtS
— Enzo Rabouy (@enzorabouyy) January 29, 2024
The battle between agriculture and ‘green’ agenda proponents is set to become a key issue in the upcoming European Union Parliament elections in June, with farmers and rural communities rising up in France, Germany, Poland, Romania, and previously in the Netherlands over ‘green’ regulations, which they claim have become too much to handle on top of the rising cost of fuel and inflation.
See more here climatechangedispatch
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Jerry Krause
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Hi PSI Readers,
Farmers are very independent people because they know the crops they plant in the spring are not guaranteed to produce a harvest in the fall. Or if the seeds they plant in the spring, when the soil is dry, will never germinate if there are no spring rains.
Have a good day
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