British truckers protest fuel prices in London
Hundreds of truckers drove to Britain's Parliament on Wednesday to
protest the rising cost of fuel.
Police closed a section of a highway into the capital to let the
trucks gather, then escorted the 200 trucks in convoys of 20 into the
center of town. Dozens of protesters on foot gathered outside the Houses
of Parliament, waiting to go inside to lobby members of Parliament and
holding placards that said "Fair Play on Fuel."
"Business life for us at the moment is hard — very hard," said
Michael Edmunds, a trucker from Wiltshire in western England. "It's got
to the stage where I'm wondering whether it's all worth carrying on. I'm
only a small haulier. We are simply getting swallowed up."
Drivers who work for freight companies say their jobs are in danger
from gas prices that have reached 1.30 pounds a liter (nearly $10 a
gallon) for diesel, an increase of more than 20 percent in the past
year.
About half the price consists of tax, and truckers are calling on
Prime Minister Gordon Brown's government to give them a fuel duty rebate
so trucking companies can compete with those in other European
countries, where fuel duty is lower. They also want the government to
scrap a rise in fuel duty planned for October.
"This is the worst we've ever known it," said Andy Lee, who has run
his small truck business for 21 years in Gloucestershire in central
England.
High fuel prices have sparked protests across Europe in the last few
months. In May, several hundred truckers jammed a major route into
London in a similar protest.
"Our industry is being driven out of business," said Peter Carroll of
Transaction, a trucking lobby group. "Continental hauliers are able to
run in the U.K. using cheaper fuel from abroad. The government needs to
realize that the surge in oil prices has changed the world."
In 2000, gas station pumps ran dry after truckers blockaded
refineries in a series of major demonstrations that lasted a week.