In a major show of
strength, 33,000 people from across Europe – including hundreds of farmers and
160 tractors –protested at the weekend in Berlin, demanding a radical reform of
the current food and farming system and an end to industrial agriculture.
The
demonstration was organised by more than 100 organisations representing peasant
farmers, the environment, animal welfare, consumers and development issues, as
political negotiations start on the future agriculture policy for the EU, and
after the recent failure of governments to ban the weedkiller glyphosate. The
protest took also place during the annual International Green Week – one of Europe's
biggest agriculture trade fairs, drawing 70 agricultural ministers from across
the world.
Action is urgently
needed, with small, sustainable local farms under threat like never before. In
the past 12 years a third of all farms have disappeared in Germany alone.
Adrian Bebb,
food and farming campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe, who joined the march in Berlin said:
"Public support for better food and farming continues to grow. Farmers
and consumers from all over Europe have made it clear that they are fed up with
current policies that benefit huge food and agriculture corporations, at the
expense of the environment, peasant farming and public safety. Policymakers at
European and national level need to listen, and use the upcoming reform of the
EU's common agricultural policy to build a better food system for the future."