Farmers salvage mistimed protest - farmers weekly

Farmers salvage mistimed protest - farmers weekly

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16 June 1998 FARMERS SALVAGE MISTIMED PROTEST BRITISH farmers claimed victory after 50 of them sought to embarrass European Union leaders at the Cardiff summit yesterday (Monday) in protests against the ban on beef exports. Farmers organised the protest because they mistimed a 10,000-strong demonstration on Sunday when none of the 15 EU heads of states had arrived. Fifty of them jeered Prime Minister Tony Blair as he arrived for the two-day summit. One protestor, Lawrence Harries, said it was an act of desperation to achieve an immediate lifting of the beef ban and allow free access to European markets. But a spokesman for the Prime Minister, who also holds the rotating EU presidency, denied an embarrassment. He said Blair was sympathetic and supported legitimate peaceful protests. However he opposed action that prevented free movement of goods and services. Meanwhile, police had to break up an overnight blockade at Fishguard, west Wales, freeing twenty lorries which arrived from Rosslare, Ireland. * _Financial Times 16/06/98 page 2 _

16 June 1998 FARMERS SALVAGE MISTIMED PROTEST BRITISH farmers claimed victory after 50 of them sought to embarrass European Union leaders at the Cardiff summit yesterday (Monday) in protests


against the ban on beef exports. Farmers organised the protest because they mistimed a 10,000-strong demonstration on Sunday when none of the 15 EU heads of states had arrived. Fifty of


them jeered Prime Minister Tony Blair as he arrived for the two-day summit. One protestor, Lawrence Harries, said it was an act of desperation to achieve an immediate lifting of the beef ban


and allow free access to European markets. But a spokesman for the Prime Minister, who also holds the rotating EU presidency, denied an embarrassment. He said Blair was sympathetic and


supported legitimate peaceful protests. However he opposed action that prevented free movement of goods and services. Meanwhile, police had to break up an overnight blockade at Fishguard,


west Wales, freeing twenty lorries which arrived from Rosslare, Ireland. * _Financial Times 16/06/98 page 2 _