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World / Americas

Fresh rally against French airport plans

Published: 28 Feb 2016 - 12:00 am | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 10:32 pm
Peninsula

Protesters stand on a bridge overlooking a highway blocked by fellow demonstrators in Le Temple-de-Bretagne during a protest against a controversial airport project near Nantes on February 27, 2016. Protesters have been engaged in a 15-year legal battle to block the construction of a major new airport on swampland outside the western city of Nantes. Approved in 2008, the 580-million-euro (747 million USD) project had been due to start in 2014 but has been repeatedly delayed due to fierce opposition by environmental protesters. / AFP / JEAN-SEBASTIEN EVRARD

 

Notre-Dame-des-Landes, France: Thousands of demonstrators, some arriving by bicycle, some driving tractors, rallied Saturday to protest at a controversial airport development near the western French city of Nantes.

In the latest round in a long-running dispute, organisers put turnout at 50,000, although police put the number at 15,000, albeit twice their estimate for a similar protest last month.

Sporadic violence marred a similar demo two years ago.

Protesters are demanding the airport plan be withdrawn and also the cancellation of expulsion orders handed to 11 families and four farmers living at the site.

They saw their appeals rejected last month.

The recent protests come amid a 15-year legal battle to block construction of a major new airport on marshland outside Nantes.

Saturday's protest was the first since French President Francois Hollande said he would put the issue to a referendum.

"This demonstration is important to show our determination and show the politicians we outnumber them," said a spokesman for the marchers.

"We have a duty to preserve this land" for agricultural production he added.

Jose Bove, an ecologist and lawmaker in the European Parliament said "the only solution is for the president to declare this project not in the public interest."

AFP