Current:Home > MarketsFrance’s government prepares new measures to calm farmers’ protests, with barricades squeezing Paris -Secure Growth Solutions
France’s government prepares new measures to calm farmers’ protests, with barricades squeezing Paris
View
Date:2025-04-27 17:34:27
PARIS (AP) — With protesting farmers camped out at barricades around Paris, France’s government hoped to calm their anger with more concessions Tuesday to their complaints that growing and rearing food has become too difficult and not sufficiently lucrative.
Attention was focusing on an address that new Prime Minister Gabriel Attal was to give in the afternoon to France’s lower house of parliament, laying out his government’s priorities.
The farmers’ campaign for better pay, fewer constraints and lower costs has blown up into a major crisis for Attal in the first month of his new job. Protesters rejected pro-agriculture measures that Attal announced last week as insufficient. The government promised more responses would be forthcoming Tuesday.
Protesting farmers encircled Paris with traffic-snarling barricades on Monday, using hundreds of lumbering tractors and mounds of hay bales to block highways leading to the French capital that will host the Summer Olympics in six months. Protesters came prepared for an extended battle, with tents and reserves of food and water.
The government announced a deployment of 15,000 police officers, mostly in the Paris region, to stop any effort by the protesters to enter the capital. Officers and armored vehicles also were stationed at Paris’ hub for fresh food supplies, the Rungis market.
Farmers in neighboring Belgium also set up barricades to stop traffic reaching some main highways, including into the capital, Brussels.
The movement in France is another manifestation of a global food crisis worsened by Russia’s nearly two-year full-scale war in Ukraine, a major food producer.
French farmers assert that higher prices for fertilizer, energy and other inputs for growing crops and feeding livestock have eaten into their incomes.
Protesters also argue that France’s massively subsidized farming sector is over-regulated and hurt by food imports from countries where agricultural producers face lower costs and fewer constraints.
veryGood! (453)
Related
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Meloni pushes change to let voters directly elect Italy’s premier in bid to make governments last
- 2nd of four men who escaped from a central Georgia jail has been caught, sheriff’s office says
- We tune into reality TV to see well, reality. But do the stars owe us every detail?
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- At least 9 wounded in Russian attacks across Ukraine. European Commission head visits Kyiv
- The FDA proposes banning a food additive that's been used for a century
- How much you pay to buy or sell a home may be about to change. Here's what you need to know
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Thanksgiving Survival Guide: Here’s What You Need to Navigate the Holiday Season with Crazy Relatives
Ranking
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Meloni pushes change to let voters directly elect Italy’s premier in bid to make governments last
- Ex-State Department official sentenced to nearly 6 years in prison for Capitol riot attacks
- Oregon Democratic US Rep. Earl Blumenauer reflects on 27 years in Congress and what comes next
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Behati Prinsloo Reveals Sex of Baby No. 3 With Adam Levine Nearly a Year After Giving Birth
- Car crashes through gate at South Carolina nuclear plant before pop-up barrier stops it
- Lisa Vanderpump Hilariously Roasts Vanderpump Rules Star Tom Sandoval's Denim Skirt Outfit
Recommendation
Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
Surfer's body missing after reported attack by large shark off Australia
Elwood Jones closer to freedom as Ohio makes last-ditch effort to revive murder case
Captain Lee Rosbach Officially Leaving Below Deck: Meet His Season 11 Replacement
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Eric Trump wraps up testimony in fraud trial, with Donald Trump to be sworn in Monday
Former Detroit-area officer indicted on civil rights crime for punching Black man
Iran sentences a woman to death for adultery, state media say