Hundreds of farmers rolled out tractors to stage protests at government offices across France on Tuesday, railing against measures they say are crimping revenues and contributing to a spike in suicides in the sector in recent years.

"Macron, answer us!" read a banner in Le Mans, western France, as farmers dumped hay and dug up a roundabout in front of the regional government office as the protests began Monday night.

Another asked "France, do you still want farmers?" referring to regulations, price wars, green and vegan activism and global trade deals many say are stifling their ability to make a living.

A tractor with a hanged effigy of a farmer under a sign saying "Today it's him, tomorrow it might be me," during a protest by farmers in Nimes, southern France, on Tuesday.
A tractor with a hanged effigy of a farmer under a sign saying "Today it's him, tomorrow it might be me," during a protest by farmers in Nimes, southern France, on Tuesday. AFP / Pascal GUYOT

It was the second mass protest this month, after an estimated 10,000 farmers blocked highways across France on October 8.

"We're demanding an end to 'agri-bashing,' to stop making our jobs more and more difficult, to stop putting spokes in our wheels and blaming us for everything," said Delphine Fernandez, president of the Young Farmers association in the southern Gard department.

"Every day a farmer takes his own life, and it seems that Emmanuel Macron's government isn't aware of the problem," she said.

Taboo subject

French health authorities confirmed in July that the number of suicides among farmers reached 605 in 2015, the most recent year of data available, after staying stable at around 150 a year from 2007 to 2011.

Tractors with a sign saying "Macron, answer us!" as farmers began a protest on Monday in Le Mans, western France.
Tractors with a sign saying "Macron, answer us!" as farmers began a protest on Monday in Le Mans, western France. AFP / JEAN-FRANCOIS MONIER

The subject, long taboo in the sector, has made headlines in recent weeks with the success of the film "Au Nom de la Terre" (In the Name of the Earth), which recounts the true story of a farmer driven to suicide by ever-increasing demands on his operations.

Arnaud Gaillot, leader of the Young Farmers group said: "We need people to listen to farmers, regain confidence in their farmers and that goes right up to the head of state ."

Macron responded late Tuesday, criticising "unacceptable" attacks on the farming community and railing against "stigmatising our farmers as enemies of animals' well-being."

The French president, speaking during a trip to the French-administered Indian Ocean island of Mayotte, said he understood the farmer's "economic and sometimes emotional suffering".

Farm protesters in Bonn, Germany on Tuesday
Farm protesters in Bonn, Germany on Tuesday AFP / Ina FASSBENDER

"Too many of them do not manage to live off their work," while adding that things can't be changed "at the click of a finger".

'Caught in a vise'

Many farmers say they are being targeted by unreasonable restrictions on the use of pesticides, as well as by vegan activists denouncing the raising of livestock.

Despite working long hours year-round, their revenues often barely cover their costs: More than 30 percent of farmers earn just 350 euros a month, according to Social Security figures.

"Farmers are deeply angry inside, they keep taking it on the chin, and they need to express their exasperation with the government's inconsistencies," Christiane Lambert, head of the FNSEA farmers' federation, told CNews television.

"We get the feeling that agriculture is caught in a vise, and that no one understands the risk of our lands emptying out because dozens of farms are disappearing," she said.

The government says it is listening to farmers' demands, in particular by passing a food law aimed at giving farmers more pricing control against large retailers who enjoy huge profit margins.

But Agriculture Minister Didier Guillaume acknowledged Tuesday that for many farmers the law has not done enough.

"The numbers don't add up" for many, Guillaume said on LCI television, vowing to "harden things up politically."

The anger amongst farmers is not restricted ro France.

Thousands of farmers drove their tractors into German cities on Tuesday, in protest at their government's new agricultural policies which they say will hurt their livelihoods and make them scapegoats for climate change.

The German protesters are furious at a new package of regulations introduced by Chancellor Angela Merkel's government last month, which includes plans to ban the controversial weedkiller glyphosate by 2023 and limits the use of fertiliser to reduce nitrate levels in groundwater.

In the Netherlands, protests on October 1 created 1,000 kilometres of traffic jams.