Home / Auto Report Africa / Tractors Head Again to Berlin Centre in Climax to Farmer Protests
15 January 2024, Berlin: Numerous tractors parked at Strasse des 17. Juni between Tiergarten S-Bahn station and Ernst-Reuter-Platz. According to the police, around 10000 participants and 5000 vehicles are expected to take part in a large demonstration by farmers' associations and the BGL haulage association against planned subsidy cuts by the federal government, including for agricultural diesel. (PHOTO : Monika Skolimowska/dpa)

Tractors Head Again to Berlin Centre in Climax to Farmer Protests

  • Top German Lawmakers Meet Farmers

  • ‘Go away!’: Protesting Farmers Booed and Jeered German Finance Minister
Several farmers hold hands during a rally in front of the Brandenburg Gate. The protests are directed against planned subsidy cuts by the federal government, including for agricultural diesel.( PHOTO : Sebastian Christoph Gollnow/dpa)

Large numbers of tractors headed to Berlin city centre, Monday morning,  for another demonstration by farmers who are angry at government plans to end tax breaks on diesel fuel.

Honking tractors could be heard in several neighbourhoods. Other agricultural workers were also seen joining the protest.

Around midday on Monday,  thousands of farmers from all over Germany  held a rally at the iconic Brandenburg Gate against the end of diesel tax breaks for the agricultural sector, in a climax to their week of protests. Many tractors were already parked by the monument in the early morning.

In addition to representatives of the Farmers’ Association and trade unions, Germany’s Finance Minister Christian Lindner also spoke at the rally.

Around 5,000 tractors and other agricultural vehicles from all over Germany took part in the rally.

On Sunday evening, the police were already having to stop tractors from entering the demonstration area in the capital’s governmental district.

“It can’t take any more,” said a police spokesperson in the evening.

In one concession, the government has decided not to abolish the motor vehicle tax exemption for the agricultural sector. However, farmers argue that this decision does not go far enough.

Meanwhile, farming industry leaders met top lawmakers from all three political parties in Germany’s governing coalition on Monday amid mass protests by farmers in Berlin over subsidy cuts.

Parliamentary leaders from the Social Democrats (SPD), Greens and Free Democrats (FDP) last week invited officials from eight agricultural industry groups for talks. In addition to financial burdens facing farmers, the politicians hoped to discuss the “lack of certainty and economic prospects for agricultural businesses.”

Thousands of farmers had driven tractors and other heavy equipment into centre of the German capital to demand that Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government abandon plans to gradually reduce diesel fuel tax breaks for farmers.

‘Go away!’: Protesting farmers heckle German finance minister

Protesting farmers booed and jeered German Finance Minister Christian Lindner at a large demonstration in central Berlin on Monday.

Lindner took to the podium to address the angry farmers, who were protesting government proposals to cut agricultural diesel fuel subsidies, but was shouted down by the crowd.

He was only able to begin his speech after Joachim Rukwied, the leader of a major agricultural lobby group, appealed to the crowd.

The assembled farmers nevertheless continued to accompany his speech with loud shouts of “Go away!” as well as honking and whistling. The heckling largely drowned out the sound of Lindner’s speech, despite the loudspeakers at the rally.

Check Also

Cheap Tyre Imports The New Normal – But Tread Lightly

It is anticipated that seven out of every 10 vehicles in South Africa will be ...