Police, fishermen clash at EU HQ in Brussels

Police have clashed with hundreds of fisherman protesting against the high cost of fuel outside the headquarters of the European Union in Brussels.

Izvor: BBC

Wednesday, 04.06.2008.

21:52

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Police have clashed with hundreds of fisherman protesting against the high cost of fuel outside the headquarters of the European Union in Brussels. Several windows in EU buildings were broken and at least one car was overturned during the demonstration. Police, fishermen clash at EU HQ in Brussels Riot police responded by firing water cannon and launching baton charges. The fishermen have said they will go out of business unless the EU allows national governments to give them more financial aid and subsidize their fuel. French fishermen have been on strike for several weeks over the price of diesel, which has risen by 240 pct. in the past five years. In recent days they have been joined by members of fleets from the UK, Spain, Portugal and Italy, who have blockaded ports across Europe, and truck drivers. With foghorns, flags and flares, hundreds of mainly French and Italian fishermen stopped traffic on the main road in the European district of the Belgian capital. After several hours of stand-off, the protest turned violent. A car was overturned, bins were set on fire and windows were smashed by flares. Riot police lined up behind a barbed-wire barricade in front of the European Commission responded by attempting to disperse the crowd with water cannons and baton charges. Earlier, a delegation of fishermen met senior EU officials briefly outside the Commission's headquarters to explain their grievances and demand emergency aid from both the EU and their countries' governments. Philippe Margoud, a fisherman from the French Mediterranean port of Agde, said the price of marine diesel had gone up by a third in the past four months. "Fuel is too expensive. France put a mechanism in place two years ago which provided the fishermen with a compensation package, and Europe said no," he said. "That's why we came here, to tell Europe to stop getting in the way of the French government trying to help us." However, the EU officials stressed that any fuel subsidies would be illegal under European law and unsustainable in the long term. EU rules state that the value-added tax (VAT) rate on fuel cannot be less than 15%. Member states are free to set VAT rates at or above that minimum. "There is a problem of high costs at the time when the sector is also in a situation where there is overcapacity and where there is a need for restructuring," said Patrick Tabone, the chief political adviser of the EU fisheries commissioner. "What we need to ensure is that the responses we come up with are a real help to the sector, not only in the short term, but in the long term." The BBC's Dominic Hughes in Brussels says that this is not a message the angry fishermen will want to hear. Brussels today (Beta)

Police, fishermen clash at EU HQ in Brussels

Riot police responded by firing water cannon and launching baton charges.

The fishermen have said they will go out of business unless the EU allows national governments to give them more financial aid and subsidize their fuel.

French fishermen have been on strike for several weeks over the price of diesel, which has risen by 240 pct. in the past five years.

In recent days they have been joined by members of fleets from the UK, Spain, Portugal and Italy, who have blockaded ports across Europe, and truck drivers.

With foghorns, flags and flares, hundreds of mainly French and Italian fishermen stopped traffic on the main road in the European district of the Belgian capital.

After several hours of stand-off, the protest turned violent. A car was overturned, bins were set on fire and windows were smashed by flares.

Riot police lined up behind a barbed-wire barricade in front of the European Commission responded by attempting to disperse the crowd with water cannons and baton charges.

Earlier, a delegation of fishermen met senior EU officials briefly outside the Commission's headquarters to explain their grievances and demand emergency aid from both the EU and their countries' governments.

Philippe Margoud, a fisherman from the French Mediterranean port of Agde, said the price of marine diesel had gone up by a third in the past four months.

"Fuel is too expensive. France put a mechanism in place two years ago which provided the fishermen with a compensation package, and Europe said no," he said.

"That's why we came here, to tell Europe to stop getting in the way of the French government trying to help us."

However, the EU officials stressed that any fuel subsidies would be illegal under European law and unsustainable in the long term.

EU rules state that the value-added tax (VAT) rate on fuel cannot be less than 15%. Member states are free to set VAT rates at or above that minimum.

"There is a problem of high costs at the time when the sector is also in a situation where there is overcapacity and where there is a need for restructuring," said Patrick Tabone, the chief political adviser of the EU fisheries commissioner.

"What we need to ensure is that the responses we come up with are a real help to the sector, not only in the short term, but in the long term."

The BBC's Dominic Hughes in Brussels says that this is not a message the angry fishermen will want to hear.

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