Protesters
demonstrate against Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(TTIP) free trade agreement ahead of Obama's Hannover visit
Nigel Treblin/Reuters
German protesters turned out in full force to voice their
anger over the proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(TTIP) deal between the US and EU. The mass demonstration in Hannover
saw an estimated 35,000 people march in protest just a day ahead of
President Barack Obama's visit to the city to open a trade fair.
Critics of the deal are unhappy about the lack of
transparency and fear that it could pose a threat to Germany's
environmental and legal standards. "The TTIP between the American
continent and Europe is very dangerous for the democracy, for our nature
and for the rights of the workers," demonstrator Florian Rohrich told the BBC.
"The rights in America for workers are much lower. It's like
the Trojan horse. They can't change our whole system. But they will –
because TTIP is written by the groups, by the companies, not by the
politicians," Rohrich added.
TIPP objection
Despite the huge turnout, the rally was described as
peaceful. Participants carried banners with slogans reading "Yes We Can –
Stop TTIP!" and one Greenpeace member even dangled from a crane to drive the message home.
The free trade agreement has little support in Germany, with
only one in five Germans in favour of TTIP, a survey conducted by the
Bertelsmann Foundation found. Conversely, only 18% of the US population oppose the TTIP. Both Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel insist that the agreement will boost growth on both sides of the Atlantic.
The results from the Bertelsmann Foundation
reveal a huge decline in support for free trade. "Two years ago a
significant majority of 88% favoured free trade in general," the
organisation noted. "According to the latest poll, this approval has
tumbled. Currently, only about half of Germans still consider
free
trade a good idea. More than a quarter reject it entirely. Approval of
the TTIP has also suffered in recent years: 55% were in favour in 2014
and 25% against."
Merkel defends deal
In a video statement on 22 April, Merkel assured Germans
that the TTIP would not trample on citizens' rights. "We don't want
people to have the impression that something is being hushed up here, or
that norms are being undermined. The opposite is true," the German
leader was quoted as saying by AFP news agency.
The 13th round of TTIP negotiations are due to get underway
in New York on 25 April. Officials on both sides of the continent are
hoping to agree key aspects of the deal before the end of the year.
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