Farmers drive tractors through Paris and block highways in Greece to
protest free trade deal
[January 09, 2026] By
SYLVIE CORBET and DEREK GATOPOULOS
PARIS (AP) — Dozens of angry farmers demonstrated in France and Greece
Thursday, halting traffic and blocking key roads with tractors to
protest European Union plans to move forward with a free trade deal with
five South American nations.
Farmers drove about a hundred tractors into Paris and gathered in front
of France's powerful lower house of parliament, the National Assembly,
under close watch from a large number of police officers.
In Greece, farmers escalated nationwide protests, launching a 48-hour
blockade of major highways, junctions and toll stations. Tractors lined
key routes across the country, halting all traffic except emergency
vehicles in protest of the contentious EU-Mercosur agreement and rising
costs.
European farmers have long denounced the trade deal with the Mercosur
nations of Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay, arguing
that it would hurt their livelihoods and flood the market with cheaper
imports.
Ludovic Dupeux, of the Rural Coordination branch in Corsica, came all
the way from the Mediterranean island by boat, tractor and train to
reach Paris. He said centrist President Emmanuel Macron has not done
enough to prevent the deal from being signed.
“We want President Macron to stand by the side of farmers,” he said. “He
needs to clearly tell it out loud and to impose it, too.”

Farmers in Greece say they're pushed to desperation
Greece's main highway connecting Athens to the northern city of
Thessaloniki was shut in both directions at several points, as farmers
demanded stronger state support.
Police directed traffic to secondary routes when possible and did not
intervene to counter the blockades.
But the country’s conservative government has warned that it would not
tolerate more extended blockades.
“We’ve reached a breaking point,” Yiannis Baritas, a cabbage farmer and
father of five, said at roadblock in southern Greece. “We’ll stay here
as long as it takes to support our families. They’ve pushed us to
desperation.”
The protests, which began in November, initially centered on rising
production costs, worsened by a series of crises: a subsidy fraud
scandal delaying legitimate payments, and a sheep and goat pox outbreak.
The government on Wednesday announced concessions to try and head off
the latest protests, including cheaper electricity rates for farmers and
fuel tax rebates.
The proposed trade deal would create a vast free-trade zone between
Europe and South American nations.
“If this agreement goes through, Greek agriculture is finished,”
Vangelis Roubis, a protest organizer, told The Associated Press outside
the southern city of Halkida.
“Greece depends on agriculture and tourism," he said. "We don’t have
heavy industry like Germany or France. Production costs here are 300%
higher than in Latin America.”
Roubis pointed to potatoes as an example: Greek farmers need 35 to 40
cents per kilogram to break even, compared with roughly 10 cents in
Brazil.
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Farmers place a Greek flag on a tractor blocking the highway during
a protest in Thiva, about 70 kilometers (44 miles) north of Athens,
Greece, over delays in the payment of European Union-backed
agricultural subsidies, Thursday, Jan. 8 2025. (AP Photo/Thanassis
Stavrakis)
 “We want Greece to join the block of
EU nations that rejects this deal," he added.
Pressure on French government
French farmers set up roadblocks across the country in recent days.
On Thursday about 20 tractors were in the Paris city center, some at
the Arc de Triomphe monument and others in the Eiffel Tower
neighborhood, despite a ban issued by authorities, the Interior
Ministry said.
Convoys of tractors “bypassed and forced their way,” the ministry
said.
But most of the tractors were blocked further from the center at key
traffic arteries that mark Paris’ limit.
Thursday's protest was staged by the Rural Coordination union to put
further pressure on France's government, which protesters say has
not shown strong enough opposition to the deal.
José Perez, President of the Rural Coordination in the
Lot-et-Garonne region in southwestern France, said “the goal today
is to come to Paris to express our demands closer to those who have
the power.”
“It’s a strong symbol,” he told The Associated Press.
Farmers’ concerns about the Mercosur trade deal are combining with
anger about government sanitary measures against the spread of a
bovine disease, Perez stressed.
The Rural Coordination, which has links to the far right, said in a
statement farmers expect “quick, effective decisions to face ongoing
challenges.”
The EU this week renewed internal negotiations over a free trade
agreement with five South American nations, amid speculation that a
deal could be signed in Paraguay on Jan. 12. The deal’s supporters,
led by Germany, may be able to pass over objections from France and
Poland.

Fierce opposition from France derailed the deal last month.
French Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard reaffirmed France’s
opposition to the Mercosur deal on Wednesday, saying it threatens
the production of beef, chicken, sugar, ethanol and honey, among
other sectors.
___
Gatopoulos reported from Kastro, Greece. Associated Press
journalists Jeffrey Schaeffer in Paris, Costas Kantouris in Malgara,
Greece, and Thanassis Stavrakis and Lefteris Piratakis in Kastro
contributed.
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