To protest against the numerous inspection visits carried out by the State, in particular, farmers could quickly resume mobilizations at home. across the country.
Farmers' protest movements could resume. Less than a week after the closing of the 60th edition of the Salon de l'agriculture & Paris, the anger of the agricultural world does not weaken. "The State did not understand the appeal and the distress" regrets J&eac;rôme Bayle, initiator and figure of the protest of the peasant world, this Friday March 8, 2024 at the microphone of BFMTV.
"There will be further action" assures Jérôme Bayle
The installed operator &agrav; Montesquieu-Volvestre (Haute-Garonne) particularly calls into question state controls on agricultural operations deemed “abusive”. The 42-year-old man believes that French farmers (…) are surely more closely monitored than S" and considers implementing "other actions". Having become a media figure since his first steps on the Carbonne dam (Haute-Garonne) at the start of the protest, he did not hesitate ;eacute; &agrav; put pressure on the executive this Friday: "I think that the start of spring is going to be very complicated; &agrav; manage for the French government. "Perhaps French farmers will decide to no longer feed the Frenchçais" he continues.
Wink 'agrave Darmanin, red lines drawn around farms
While Prime Minister Gabriel Attal had announced; the establishment of a single administrative control per year for each farm to simplify procedures, this is not enough for the country's farmers. Proof of the rumble, several farmers have drawné red lines around their farms as a sign of protest against the numerous controls carried out by the State. An action supported by Rural Coordination, the third largest union in the country and particularly followed in Haute-Garonne and Haute-vienne.
"It's a symbol that we wanted to use again. It is addressed to: to controllers and representatives of structures" indicates Karine Duc, co-president of Rural Coordination 47 (Lot-et-Garonne) in the columns of the Dédêche du Midi. This device& nbsp;refers to the "red lines" set by the Minister of the Interior G&rald Darmanin, last January, demanding not to block the capital's airports as well as the market de Rungis.
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