An Associated Press photographer at the German frontier saw farmers stopping refrigerated trucks to verify their contents today, and one of the protest's organisers said 300 trucks had been turned back since the morning. Other vehicles were allowed to cross freely.
Police in France tend to avoid intervening in peaceful protests, and French President Francois Hollande today said he backed the farmers and called for a high-level meeting of European agricultural officials.
"Between now and then, we will continue to pressure, so that the farmers are certain, protests or not, that we are at their side," he said.
The farmers also blocked the Spanish and German border highways yesterday as part of an ongoing protest against low prices caused by cheap imports and pressure from grocery chains that have put about 10 percent of livestock farms on the verge of bankruptcy, according to the government.
"French agriculture is suffocating and no one realises it and no one says anything," Franck Sander, president of the main farmers' federation in the Bas-Rhin region, told France-Info radio.
A senior official with the German Farmers' Association expressed understanding for French farmers' demand for higher producer prices, but argued that their criticism of wage costs in Germany is no longer justified. Germany introduced a national minimum wage of 8.50 euros (USD 9.3) an hour this year, which will have a negative impact on farming, deputy general secretary Udo Hemmerling told N24 television.
