Farmers clash with police during protest

The Guardian — About 800 farmers from  Crete rallied outside the ministry of agriculture, throwing tomatoes as tension escalated when police prevented them from staging a symbolic occupation of the building. Clashes soon broke out, with riot police using teargas to repel protesters, who were throwing rocks and setting bins on fire.

At one point, an outnumbered riot police unit was forced to flee up a street with Cretan farmers in pursuit.

Many of the ministry’s windows were broken, while rubble from rocks and broken paving stones lay strewn outside the building. Police said the farmers also threatened to spray riot police with a pesticide used for olive trees if officers used teargas. At least four farmers were detained.

The agriculture minister, Vangelis Apostolou, said: “These scenes were aimed at blackening the struggle of the farmers. For us, there is one path – that of dialogue to solve the problems of farmers. And this [path] has been opened by the prime minister.”

Farming associations have been blockading main roads with tractors for more than two weeks, forcing traffic into lengthy diversions, in protest against a planned overhaul of Greece’s troubled pension system.

Farmers in buses, pickup trucks and cars were heading to Athens for the start of the main rally, set for Friday afternoon outside parliament in Syntagma Square.

Tension also surfaced on the outskirts of the city, where one group of farmers was insisting that police allow them to continue to the city centre with their tractors.

Although the government initially banned the participation of tractors in the central Athens protest, Nikos Toskas, the deputy interior minister for public order, said a few would be allowed through.

“It was clear that we could not permit tractors to enter the city, but we have permitted a symbolic number to take part in the protest rally,” he said.

Bailout lenders are demanding that Greece scraps tax breaks for farmers and imposes pension reforms that will lead to higher monthly contributions from the self-employed and salaried employees.

The protests against the reforms have united a disparate group of professions, including lawyers, artists, accountants, engineers, doctors, dentists, seamen and casino workers.