Shropshire Star

Angry Dutch farmers descend on The Hague to demand respect

Organisers of the protest said they want to counter the ‘negative image’ of farming in the Netherlands.

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Netherlands Farmers Protest

Thousands of Dutch farmers have massed in The Hague to demand more respect for their profession, many after driving in slow-moving tractor convoys that jammed traffic around the country.

Farmers staged a national day of protest as the Netherlands wrestles with efforts to drastically reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.

A broad package of measures includes a plan to grant financial aid to farmers who want to cease operations or adopt more sustainable agriculture practices.

According to the Dutch farmers’ organisation, LTO, exports from the Netherlands’ nearly 54,000 farms and agriculture businesses were worth 90.3 billion euros (£80.4 billion) last year.

Protesters in The Hague
Protesters in The Hague (Mike Corder/AP)

Among the farmers’ demands are that the government does not further reduce the number of animals they can keep and for an “independent party” to measure the carbon and nitrogen emissions that farms produce.

“This is about our families, our future, the future of our children. It’s about our way of life,” sheep farmer Bart Kemp, one of the protest’s organisers, told the crowd in The Hague.

In an emotional speech, he said legislators “miss the common sense – farmer’s sense – that nature and animals teach us”. He appealed for a “new era in which the food producers of the Netherlands are listened to”.

Organisers said on a website for the demonstration they also wanted to counter a “negative image” farming and farmers have in the Netherlands.

They said: “We are not animal abusers and environment polluters. We have a heart for our businesses.”

One of the parties in the country’s ruling coalition recently proposed a 50% reduction in the number of animals allowed on farms as a way to cut nitrogen emissions.

Agriculture minister Carola Schouten said no such reduction would take place as long as she held her post. She pledged to listen to the farmers’ other concerns.

“We are working for a strong agricultural sector with an eye on a healthy environment,” she told the farmers.

Tractors block the roads
Tractors block the roads (Mike Corder/AP)

The Dutch motorists association, ANWB, reported that Tuesday was the busiest ever morning on the nation’s roads, with more than 620 miles of traffic jams blamed on convoys of tractors, bad weather and accidents.

Some farmers avoided the traffic by driving their tractors along the North Sea beach to The Hague.

Others set off in the early hours of the morning and waited, honking their tractors’ horns, in long queues to get into the city.

Police sealed off roads heading into The Hague’s historic centre and arrested at least one farmer for driving his tractor through a metal fence surrounding the protest site and a second for allegedly interfering with the arrest.

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