BRUSSELS, Belgium, June 18, 2008

EU Summit Battling Fuel Protests

Farmers, Taxi Drivers, Truckers Gather In BelgiumTo Fight Oil's Economic Strain

  • The tractors of Belgian farmers are parked in the Cinquantenaire Park in the center of Brussels. Hundreds of farmers, truckers and taxi drivers blocked roads into the center of Brussels on the eve of an EU summit to push leaders for help coping with skyrocketing fuel prices.

    The tractors of Belgian farmers are parked in the Cinquantenaire Park in the center of Brussels. Hundreds of farmers, truckers and taxi drivers blocked roads into the center of Brussels on the eve of an EU summit to push leaders for help coping with skyrocketing fuel prices.  (AP)

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(AP)  Hundreds of farmers, truckers and taxi drivers blocked roads in and around Brussels on the eve of an EU summit to push leaders for help coping with skyrocketing fuel prices.

Convoys of taxis, farm tractors and truckers blocked parts of Brussels' inner ring road Wednesday, wreaking traffic havoc. Police said they expected some 1,000 protesting vehicles in central Brussels. Farmers were also handing out free vegetables and meat at a downtown square.

The protesters - echoing recent demonstrations elsewhere in Europe and around the world - argue that the high fuel prices threaten their livelihoods. They are demanding that EU governments step in with subsidies to ease the sting of higher prices.

Global oil prices have quadrupled in the past seven years, hitting a new high of $139.89 a barrel during Monday trading. Oil was at $135.18 a barrel on Tuesday.

The high prices are pushing up costs across Belgium's economy, forcing shoppers to pay out more for groceries, power and transport - and eating into economic growth.

"It's been very, very difficult," said truck driver Paul Delestiene from the UPTR truckers union. "Diesel has risen some 40 percent. This has an enormous effect on salaries, and it's very difficult to buy vehicles, or to keep staff. It's very, very expensive."

Barricades went up around EU headquarters and some 800 riot police were on standby the day before leaders from the EU's 27 member nations are to gather in the Belgian capital for a two-day summit.

"The economic situation in the agricultural sector is not good right now, as everyone knows, and that's why we are headed for Brussels," said Benoit Clement, a farmer from Wallonia. "This time, the protest is a calm one; the next time, they better watch out if there is no deal" on aid.

The convoys were expected to vacate the city center during the late afternoon rush hour, police said.

A similar protest by Spanish, French and Portuguese fishermen around EU headquarters two weeks ago turned violent, with smashed windows and overturned cars. In the largest protests, in Spain earlier this month, truck drivers seriously disrupted supplies to factories and markets for a week.

Prime Minister Yves Leterme told demonstrators their protest was justified.

"People are right to defend what they are doing," he told The Associated Press. "They need an income and at the moment, in the market, the way prices are made, I think we have some problems."

But EU officials say there is little the bloc can do to intervene directly on fuel prices, except to promote longer-term reforms to encourage alternate fuel use and boost food production. EU leaders and officials have been reluctant to cut sales tax on fuel, as France has suggested, because it could distort market demand.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso cautioned EU governments against short-term handouts to fishermen, farmers, truckers and others suffering the brunt of high fuel costs.

"Immediate steps are justified to help the most hard-pressed households" pay for rising energy prices, he said, but he called it "futile" to give handouts to offset energy price rises that are here to stay.

Barroso said the most "appropriate" response is for governments to initiate long-term reform in ailing sectors as fisheries, low taxes on products, and services that save energy, and "targeted" and temporary measures for the poor.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by lorinkundert June 18, 2008 9:43 PM EDT
Here''s to England for selling out the people and becoming a vassal state to the new Holy Roman Empire (EU). Ireland, you have remembered the oppression you have fought for a thousand years to be free of, bravo to you for rejecting the EU and the loss of sovereignty the treaty brings.
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by darnedsocks June 18, 2008 5:52 PM EDT
HEY, WHILE THEY''RE PROTESTING, THEY OUGHT TO BE MAKING DEMANDS TO GET SOME CONTRACEPTIVES AND SOME BICYCLES! THE WORLD REALLY NEEDS TO CUT BACK ON "HUMAN PRODUCTION"! IT IS SIMPLY UNREALISTIC TO EXPECT THAT THE EARTH IS GOING TO CONTINUE TO PROVIDE NATURAL RESOURCES FOR THIS ENORMOUS GLOBAL POPULATION! INDIA NEEDS A CONTRACEPTIVE PLAN ESPECIALLY!
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by drinuk June 18, 2008 3:57 PM EDT
The Bush Cheney oil cartel will be gone shortly, it will drop.

In the meantime, all those gas saving patents the oil companies have brought up over the last fifty years should now be declared null and void and placed in the public domain. That would be a good start Obama, go to it.
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