French farmers stage protest over city's decision to make school meals vegetarian
French farmers have organised protests over a decision by local authorities in one French city to make school meals entirely vegetarian.
The farmers' protest on Monday was the latest stage in a backlash against a decision by authorities in the south eastern city of Lyon to offer a 'single menu without meat' in the city's school canteens.
The measure was intended to serve students more quickly and streamline mealtimes, according to an email sent to councillors from deputy mayor in charge of education Stéphanie Léger, adding that it was a temporary measure linked to Covid rules.
"We will not let everything go under the pretext of a health crisis!" farming unions the Fédération nationale des syndicats d'exploitants agricoles (Fdsea) and the Jeunes agriculteurs du Rhône said in a joint statement ahead of the demonstration, expected to include 30 tractors and about 100 protesters.
READ ALSO: Why French school dinners are going vegetarian - at least for one day a week
On Sunday, government ministers accused Lyon's green mayor of harming children's health.
“Let’s stop putting ideology on our children’s plates,” Agriculture Minister Julien Denormandie wrote on Twitter, demanding action from the préfecture.
“Let’s just give them what they need to grow. Meat is part of it.”
Arrêtons de mettre de l’idéologie dans l’assiette de nos enfants !
Donnons-leur simplement ce dont ils ont besoin pour bien grandir. La viande en fait partie.
J’ai saisi le Préfet du Rhône. https://t.co/Kiw0v5ZaNC
— Julien Denormandie (@J_Denormandie) February 21, 2021
But Ms Léger told regional newspaper Le Progrès the decision was "absolutely not a forced shift towards vegetarian menus", and said that "the measure will be applied only until the Easter holidays" and that "if the health situation allows it, the city will return to the menus as we know them, with two meat-free menus per week".
READ ALSO: Do French kids get the best school lunches in the world?
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin also piled on, describing the decision as an “unacceptable insult” to French farmers and butchers, adding: “Many children often only get to eat meat at the school canteen.”
En plus de l’insulte inacceptable aux agriculteurs et aux bouchers français, on voit bien que la politique moraliste et élitiste des « Verts » exclut les classes populaires. De nombreux enfants n’ont souvent que la cantine pour manger de la viande... Idéologie scandaleuse. https://t.co/gFGf0JWZKn
— Gérald DARMANIN (@GDarmanin) February 20, 2021
Lyon's Mayor Gregory Doucet, who ousted Gerard Collomb in last year's municipal elections when several cities turned green, insisted the decision was “solely” because of the health crisis and claimed his right-wing predecessor had faced no backlash when he made “exactly the same measure” during the first wave.
Cette mesure de menu unique est prise pour des raisons sanitaires.
On ne vous a d'ailleurs pas entendu tenir ces propos à Gérard Collomb, membre de votre famille politique et qui avait pris exactement la même mesure lors de la première vague.
1/4 https://t.co/QLgiuSE7jL
— Grégory Doucet (@Gregorydoucet) February 21, 2021
Doucet insisted the menu - which includes fish and eggs - was 'balanced for all schoolchildren'.
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The farmers' protest on Monday was the latest stage in a backlash against a decision by authorities in the south eastern city of Lyon to offer a 'single menu without meat' in the city's school canteens.
The measure was intended to serve students more quickly and streamline mealtimes, according to an email sent to councillors from deputy mayor in charge of education Stéphanie Léger, adding that it was a temporary measure linked to Covid rules.
"We will not let everything go under the pretext of a health crisis!" farming unions the Fédération nationale des syndicats d'exploitants agricoles (Fdsea) and the Jeunes agriculteurs du Rhône said in a joint statement ahead of the demonstration, expected to include 30 tractors and about 100 protesters.
READ ALSO: Why French school dinners are going vegetarian - at least for one day a week
On Sunday, government ministers accused Lyon's green mayor of harming children's health.
“Let’s stop putting ideology on our children’s plates,” Agriculture Minister Julien Denormandie wrote on Twitter, demanding action from the préfecture.
“Let’s just give them what they need to grow. Meat is part of it.”
Arrêtons de mettre de l’idéologie dans l’assiette de nos enfants !
— Julien Denormandie (@J_Denormandie) February 21, 2021
Donnons-leur simplement ce dont ils ont besoin pour bien grandir. La viande en fait partie.
J’ai saisi le Préfet du Rhône. https://t.co/Kiw0v5ZaNC
READ ALSO: Do French kids get the best school lunches in the world?
Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin also piled on, describing the decision as an “unacceptable insult” to French farmers and butchers, adding: “Many children often only get to eat meat at the school canteen.”
En plus de l’insulte inacceptable aux agriculteurs et aux bouchers français, on voit bien que la politique moraliste et élitiste des « Verts » exclut les classes populaires. De nombreux enfants n’ont souvent que la cantine pour manger de la viande... Idéologie scandaleuse. https://t.co/gFGf0JWZKn
Lyon's Mayor Gregory Doucet, who ousted Gerard Collomb in last year's municipal elections when several cities turned green, insisted the decision was “solely” because of the health crisis and claimed his right-wing predecessor had faced no backlash when he made “exactly the same measure” during the first wave.
Cette mesure de menu unique est prise pour des raisons sanitaires.
On ne vous a d'ailleurs pas entendu tenir ces propos à Gérard Collomb, membre de votre famille politique et qui avait pris exactement la même mesure lors de la première vague.
1/4 https://t.co/QLgiuSE7jL
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