Latest News

Polish farmers intensify protests against 'executioner' EU

Polish farmers blocked roadways with tractors and flares on Wednesday in escalating protests against EU ecological policies and inexpensive food imports from neighbouring Ukraine which the bloc provisionally accepted lengthen.

Placards depicted a farmer swinging from a gallows beside wind farms and an EU-emblazoned executioner with the words: Green Deal equals death of Polish farming, referring to the bloc's plan to tackle environment modification.

Farmers in Poland and somewhere else in the bloc have actually been protesting in recent months to demand the re-imposition of customs duties on agricultural imports from Ukraine that were waived after Russia's intrusion in 2022.

They say Ukraine's farmers are flooding Europe with cheap imports that leave them unable to compete.

With numerous protests planned, footage from Zakret, east of Warsaw, showed farmers obstructing ways into the capital. Tractors lined roads installed with Polish flags while red flares were triggered.

We demand the withdrawal of the 'Green Offer' as a whole, we require the withdrawal of the 'Suitable for 55' (EU climate strategy), the limits on all emissions, all the bans and orders, stated protest organiser Lukasz Komorowski, talking to fellow rallying farmers at the Zakret blockade.

QUOTA DEBATE

On Wednesday, the EU reached provisional arrangement to extend Ukrainian food manufacturers' tariff-free access to its markets till June 2025 - albeit with brand-new limits on grain imports.

Polish protest leaders stated they were not happy with the newest offer as it included the last couple of years as a reference for import limitations. They desire quotas based on figures from well before the war in Ukraine started, when imports were much lower.

We require quotas and that they be determined for the duration from 2000, and not as Ukraine wants 2022-2023, since that was when the (import) levels were the greatest. This does not completely satisfy us, since it is not a good service, Slawomir Izdebski, leader of the OPZZ farmers' union, informed .

Polish authorities stated they knew of more than 580 demonstrations planned for Wednesday, with an estimated involvement of 70,000 individuals.

Last Friday, the European Commission also provided concessions to farmers as it proposed an easing of guidelines on leaving land fallow or rotating crops.

Farmers in the Czech Republic held similar demonstrations.

They drove an estimated 1,600 tractors and other farming equipment onto the streets, Barbora Pankova, a. spokesperson for the Czech Agrarian Chamber, informed Czech. Television.

(source: Reuters)