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Australian farmers protest animal, environment policies they say harm them

Hundreds of farmers from throughout Australia held a demonstration on Tuesday versus government farming policies they stated were influenced by environmental and animal welfare activists and which were hurting their livelihoods.

Australia is among the world's most significant farming exporters and farmers nationwide are increasingly upset with the centre-left Labor government that has sought to ban exports of live sheep, restrict water usage and accelerate building and construction of renewable power and transmission in backwoods.

We deserve to be respected, National Farmers' Federation ( NFF) President David Jochinke informed a crowd on the lawn in front of Australia's federal parliament in Canberra.

There are alternative voices that are united against us. We do not believe they are the ones that ought to be setting the policy, he stated. We seem like we are getting stiffed.

The federal government did not send out a representative to the rally. Agriculture minister Julie Collins informed the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) the federal government was committed to listening and had helped farmers by broadening abroad market gain access to and investing in biosecurity.

The NFF stated more than 2,000 people attended what was its initially nationwide rally of farmers in the capital given that the 1980s.

The protest belongs to a wave of unrest in Europe and somewhere else focused on federal governments imposing environmental guideline that farmers state concerns them with bureaucracy and greater costs, as well as limiting their ability to farm.

Our message is clear: talk with us, Jochinke said.

Federal elections are due in Australia by May next year and farm lobby leaders state they will attempt to eject Labor by raising money and targeting marginal seats.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton told the rally he would reverse a restriction on live sheep exports and the opposition agriculture spokesman said he was against water restrictions.

We have your backs, Dutton said.

Australian farmers have seen several years of bumper production thanks to plentiful rain, however pessimism is swarming.

Under this federal government there's no future for farming in Australia, said Will Croker, a 32-year-old livestock farmer from New South Wales. It's wrong.

(source: Reuters)