French protests: Female farmer killed as car hits French protesters

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Farmers have cut off key roads for days in the south-west, one of the France’s most important agricultural regions.

Early indications suggested the accident south of Toulouse was not deliberate, the local prosecutor said.

Agriculture Minister Marc Fesneau said it was a “tragedy for all of us”.

Tuesday’s accident came as farmers across France expanded their roadblocks after a meeting with Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, to address complaints about new environmental regulations and rising energy costs.

Public prosecutors said the car “struck bales of straw and mowed down three people” while driving on a stretch of dual carriageway on the main N20 national route at Pamiers 70km (43 miles) south of Toulouse, while it was still dark at around 05:45 (04:45GMT) on Tuesday morning.

The farmer who died, named locally as Alexandra Sonac, was described as a cattle breeder from the nearby village of Saint-Felix-de-Tournegat.

The local prosecutor said at one point that the farmer’s 14-year-old daughter had died in hospital of her injuries, but later made clear that she remained in a critical condition. The farmer’s husband is being treated in intensive care.

The three people in the car were all detained. They had reportedly been driving from Toulouse to Andorra, another two hours’ drive to the south.

An investigation has been opened into aggravated manslaughter although local prosecutor Olivier Mouysset said the incident did not appear to be deliberate.

The young farmer who died was a member of the main FNSEA farmers’ union, whose president Arnaud Rousseau said that “in this particular moment that [French] agriculture is dealing with, this kind of tragedy is difficult to cope with”.

“I’d like to tell the people on the ground first of all that they have the full support of French farmers.”

As the farmers’ protests spread across France, the head of the Jeunes Agriculteurs (Young Farmers) union, Arnaud Gaillot, said he had never seen such widespread determination. “If necessary we’ll blockade Paris… some [of our members] have nothing else to lose, their survival is at stake,” he told RTL radio.

Tractors and lorries blocked the A7 motorway in south-east France, with the slogan “we’re dying to feed you” daubed in red on one of the vehicles.

The most recent protests started in the south-west last week. Although it is one of the most important agricultural regions in the country, the FNSEA says farmers in this part of France have the lowest incomes within the profession.

They are already being nicknamed “gilets verts“, or green jackets – a reference to the broader gilets jaunes civil protests that swept across France over rising fuel prices.

More than 400 tractors last week blocked the centre of Toulouse, home to around 800,000 people; and over the past few days several key motorways in the south west have been cut off entirely by farmers who have installed sleeping quarters in the middle of the highways.

Aware of how politically sensitive the situation is, the French interior minister said on Monday he would not order police to break up the blockades.

Prime Minister Gabriel Attal responded to news of the accident on Tuesday by paying tribute to the family and friends of those involved in the accident. The nation was “overwhelmed and united” and all of France’s farmers were in mourning, he said on social media.