Tag: rome

  • Farmers protest: From India to Europe

    Farmers protest: From India to Europe

    Farmers are protesting from India to Europe, separately, for their rights and to register their rebellion with sitting governments against soaring fuel, and fertilizer costs, lower prices of their produce, and restrictive regulations. The protests are shedding light on the very pertinent issues faced by the primary food-producing sector of countries owning big agricultural markets.

    Demands of Greek farmers

    Farmers in Greece are protesting across the country against rising costs. They are conducting a tractor rally all across the country. Manolis Liakis, a farmer from the southern island of Crete, talked to __ and singled out fuel costs as his biggest problem. He said farmers pay more than three times as much for petrol as shipping companies due to tax disparities. Farmers can’t sell their products “for ridiculously low prices while the consumer buys them at extremely high prices”, he said.

    Demands of Polish farmers

    In Poland, farmers are blocking roads to stop cheap grain imports crossing the border from Ukraine. They are demanding a “complete embargo” on Ukranian produce. During the protests on Tuesday against competition from imports of cheaper Ukrainian products, farmers in Gorzyczki, southern Poland, unfurled a banner saying “Putin, get Ukraine, Brussels, and our government in order”. Consequently, the farmers were warned by the government against raising the slogans.

    Demands of Spanish farmers

    Spanish farmers are gathering with hundreds of tractors in tow to protest against the unfair competition from outside the European Union. They want to include production costs in the end product so they don’t end up selling their goods at a loss. Additionally, they want imported products to be subjected to the same conditions that they have to face.

    Demands of French farmers

    French farmers blocked a milk transport in protest against wholesale prices they say are too low. The farmers’ unions have made it clear they want ironclad assurances that their grievances over produce prices and red tape have been addressed. French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal is trying to negotiate and pacify the raging farmers with the negotiations.

    Demands of Czech farmers

    In Prague, farmers are on the roads because they feel neglected in the policy-making process. After all, they are not given due attention by the government. “Around 3,000 tractors took to the streets,” The Czech Chamber of Agriculture said in a statement on the nationwide protests. Their demands included an end to restrictions on agricultural production, cutting red tape for farming, and introducing changes to the EU-Ukraine arrangements on farming imports.

    Demands of Italian farmers

    In Rome, cowbells are clanking with the message that Farmers feed the world, but can’t afford to farm.

    Demands of Indian farmers

    In India, massive protests have broken out over minimum crop price guarantees which were promised nearly a year ago but not implemented by the government. Thousands of Indian farmers riding tractors attempted to resume their push towards New Delhi. They were attacked by the police claiming the life of young farmer Shubhkaran Singh and injuring 25 others. Farm unions are demanding a law to set a minimum price on all crops, expanding a government scheme that already exists for staples, including rice and wheat. They have also demanded other concessions, including the waiving of loans and universal pensions for farmers aged 60 and above.


    Concerns of Canadian Farmers

    In Canada, there are fewer environmental regulations but farmers feel a disconnect with the central government whose main mandate is based on the environment. They have been pushing forward all kinds of policies about fertilizer reduction and disallowing certain pesticides. The green policies and higher costs have instead of favouring them making farmers feel ignored. Experts say the consumers feel that lower output prices and higher input prices are just a way for the government to tell them that do whatever they want but in a cleaner and environmentally friendly way.

    Conclusion

    Protesting farmers are trying to divert attention to the most neglected yet important sector of a country which is the food-producing sector which is the backbone of both the society and the economy of the country yet remains ignored by the political class for their vested interests.

  • Man asks police to put him behind bars to escape ‘unbearable’ life with wife

    Man asks police to put him behind bars to escape ‘unbearable’ life with wife

    A man under house arrest in Italy went to a police barrack and asked them to put him behind bars because life with his wife at home was unbearable, the police said Sunday.

    As per reports, the 30-year-old Albanian citizen “was no longer able to cope with the forced cohabitation with his wife”, the Carabinieri police said in a statement.

    “Exasperated by the situation, he preferred to escape, spontaneously presenting himself to the Carabinieri to ask to serve his sentence behind bars,” they wrote.

    Read More: https://thecurrent.pk/no-mutton-no-marriage-groom-calls-off-wedding/

    The man had been under house arrest for drug crimes for several months and had a few years left to serve, an official Captain Francesco Giacomo told AFP.

    “He lived at home with his wife and family. It wasn’t going well anymore,” Ferrante said.

    “He said, ‘Listen, my domestic life has become hell, I can’t do it anymore, I want to go to jail.’

    The man was immidiately arrested for violating his house arrest and judicial authorities ordered his transfer to prison.

  • Pakistani-Italian girl in Italy goes missing after she refuses arranged marriage

    Pakistani-Italian girl in Italy goes missing after she refuses arranged marriage

    An 18-year-old girl, Saman Abbas, has been missing for three months in Novellara, Italy.

     Local prosecutors and police fear Saman’s family may have killed her. But after 67 days of searching, neither Saman nor her body has been found.

    According to journalist Aliya Salahuddin, Saman’s parents had arranged her marriage with her cousin in Pakistan. Saman approached social services and was sent to live with a protective community.

    According to the BBC, Saman had lived under the protection of social services since October, but returned to the family home in Novellara, near Parma, in late April.

    Saman wanted to marry Saqib, who lives in a city near Rome. Saqib told the Independent Urdu that Saman’s parents disliked the relationship and they had also threatened him.

    According to Saqib, Saman tried hard to convince his parents. Saqib himself spoke to Saman’s mother but she was not ready to accept him.

    “We were sure the Italian system would help us,” said Saqib. But the system had its own conditions. They needed Saman’s identity card and other documents that are required for a wedding in Italy. Saman did not have any option so she went back to her home with the intention to make a last effort to persuade her parents and get her documents.

    It was April 20 when Saman went to her home in Novellara. Ten days later, on April 30, it was the last time she contacted Saqib via text message. Later, CCTV footage showed Saman leaving the house with her family on the night of April 30, but she was not with them when they returned.

    After spending a few days at her home, Saman suspected that she was in danger. Once she sent a voice message to Saqib saying that she heard her parents saying ‘kill her’ and when she asked her mother for an explanation, she replied: “No no it is not about you. This is a girl in Pakistan who ran away, we are talking about her.”

    Saqib said that Saman had told him that if he does not get any message from her for a few days then he should understand that there must be something wrong and he should report it to the police.

    Saqib did report it to the police. He approached the police in his area. The search operation conducted by the agencies took a few days and there was a bit of negligence, but on May 5, the police arrived at the Saman’s house from the local station of Blakhar Novellara to check. The house was locked and the police got to know that her parents had gone to Pakistan.

    No ticket was issued in Saman’s name. The Italian authorities then proceeded with the case.

    The local prosecutor named five people in the murder investigation.  Saman’s mother, father, uncle and two cousins. The younger brother has been questioned and a cousin is in police custody who was arrested on a bus travelling without documents from Paris to Barcelona in France.

    On July 12, the Italian police stopped the search. This does not mean that the case is closed. According to local media, police sources said that the quest was stopped because there was no place left in the area where Saman’s body had not been searched. Saqib is hopeful that there may be a possibility of Saman being alive and that she may have been forcibly kept somewhere.