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Photos: Greek farmers drive tractors to parliament to demand financial help | Agriculture News

Scores of brightly coloured tractors have been parked outside Greece’s parliament, horns blaring, as thousands of farmers angry at high production costs protested in Athens.

“Without us, you don’t eat,” one banner at Tuesday’s rally said. Some farmers carried mock coffins and funeral garlands as symbols of their plight.

The farmers, whose demands are similar to those at farmer protests elsewhere in Europe, have spent weeks staging sporadic blockades along highways and in rural towns. Farmers in central Greece are also still reeling from floods last year.

The centre-right government has expressed sympathy with the farmers but said budgetary constraints prevent it from meeting all their demands beyond substantial electricity cost reductions.

Protesters say that’s not enough. They want tax-free fuel, debt forgiveness, measures against foreign competition and speedier compensation for damage from natural disasters. Farmers also criticise the substantial markup in shelf prices compared with what wholesalers pay them for their produce.

Manolis Liakis, a farmer from the southern island of Crete, singled out fuel costs. He said farmers pay more than three times as much for petrol as shipping companies due to tax disparities.

Farmers can’t sell their products “for ridiculously low prices while the consumer buys them at extremely high prices”, he said.

The rally ended peacefully. Some farmers stayed outside parliament all night and left with their tractors on Wednesday.

In a show of solidarity, hundreds of students joined the farmers and protested against government plans to end the state monopoly on university education.

The government took back a previous threat to block Tuesday’s protest. Police were deployed to help divert highway traffic, and much of central Athens was blocked to motorists and public transport.

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said on Monday that he could not support additional tax breaks and concessions but wanted to continue discussions with protesters.


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Md Abu Saeed

Md Abu Saeed is a dedicated online portal news journalist and publisher based in UK, Bangladesh . With a passion for storytelling and a commitment to delivering accurate and timely information, he has become a notable figure in the realm of digital journalism.

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