Crops Lifestyle Livestock News SmartNews

One killed, two injured as French farmer protests accelerate

Published:

A female farmer was killed when her car crashed into a roadblock during a nationwide protest by French farmers on Tuesday. 

According to reports, the woman, in her thirties, was killed, while her husband and teenage daughter were seriously injured when a car collided with a protest barricade along routes cut off by farmers in the southwestern regions of France. 

The car, carrying three people collided at speed with bales of straw blocking traffic in Pamiers, Ariège, hitting the three people and finally coming to a stop against a trailer, according to a statement by prosecutor Olivier Mouysset. 

Agriculture Minister Marc Fesneau said it was a “tragedy for all of us.”

Police detained the vehicle’s occupants for questioning, while the husband and daughter were transported to receive medical care after the incident.

Fesneau said that he canceled his trip to an EU meeting in Brussels to travel to the site, noting that the woman died “while defending her profession.”

Fédération nationale des syndicats d’exploitants agricoles (FNSEA), the largest farm union in France is considering nationwide protests in the weeks to come. 

The protests have provided the newly appointed prime minister, Gabriel Attal, with challenges in his new position. Attal wrote on Twitter, “Our Nation is shocked and united.” 

Attal had met with farming unions on Monday, but farmers had blocked roads across the country by Tuesday morning, including around Toulouse,  Isère, and Beauvais.

Along with the roadblocks, farmers drove to the prefect’s office in Agen, dumping piles of tripe, kiwifruit, and red paint on the building, hanging a banner reading, “We won’t die in silence.” 

Just weeks prior, farmers had gathered tractors and headed to Dijon, France, spraying Regional Council buildings with manure in protest against the elected assembly. 

“We’re prepared for anything; we’ve got nothing to lose,” said Josep Perez, a protester interviewed by BFM TV at a roadblock in the south-western fruit-growing region around Agen, where traffic on the A62 motorway had been disrupted.

Reports indicate that the farmers do not intend to lift the roadblocks until the prime minister provides assuage for their concerns. 

The protests have come under the pressure of increased diesel prices, higher taxes, climate change, and agricultural policies. 

Similar issues have led farmers in other European nations to take action: tractors have brought traffic to a standstill in Germany and Romania. 

Farmers are also protesting in the Netherlands and Poland. In Romania, farmers protested for the thirteenth consecutive day. 

Correction 01/25/2024 at 8:00 p.m. ET: This article was updated to include corrected details regarding the vehicle accident and subsequent death.

»Related: European farmers stage major (and messy) protests over ‘green’ policies

 

Sponsored Content on AGDaily
The views or opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of AGDAILY.