Farmers across the EU have taken to the streets this year,
calling for the removal of restrictions placed on them by a
Green Deal plan to tackle climate change and for customs duties
on farm products from Ukraine to be reimposed.
On Wednesday, thousands of Polish farmers protested outside the
prime minister's office in Warsaw, burning tyres and throwing
firecrackers. Last month farmers in Brussels set tyres alight
outside an EU farm ministers' meeting.
Czech farmers, in their third protest since mid-February, rolled
into Prague early on Thursday, lining hundreds of tractors along
a river road leading to the government offices and snarling
traffic and some public transport.
Police said farmers dumped manure, leading to one arrest.
Agriculture Minister Marek Vyborny reiterated the government
would not submit to pressure.
"I am ready to go and have a fair discussion with farmers,"
Vyborny said in a post on X social media platform.
"I expect an honest approach from the (protest) organisers who
promised not to block traffic in Prague. I don't finding manure
dumped on tram tracks to be such an approach."
The Czech Agrarian Chamber has called for subsidies matching
2022 levels and programmes to support employment in farming,
along with a reduced property tax for farmland.
It also wants the government to help tackle a surplus in EU
markets caused by cheap imports.
"The situation ... is not good and is constantly getting worse,"
the chamber's president, Jan Dolezal, said ahead of the
protests. "When the political will of the ruling coalition has
been lacking for two years, we have to publicly ask for help."
(Reporting by Eva Korinkova and Jason Hovet; Editing by Nick
Macfie)
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