German Politicians Defend Sunday Truck Ban

Published: 7 October 2003 y., Tuesday
At a time when Germany’s political landscape is rife with strife, politicians are uniting on a common front to prevent the passage of a new EU-initiative that could lift the country’s ban on Sunday trucking. "We will do all we can to see that the rule for Germany stays intact," Transport Minister Manfred Stolpe told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper, referring to discussion in Brussels to remove laws preventing truckin on Sundays. "In 2001, together with our colleagues from France, Italy and Austria, we were able to prevent (the European Union from regulating Sunday trucking.) And in just the same way, we will fight against the new movement," he said. The responsibility for such decisions must stay with individual EU member states, Stolpe said. Last week, Italy surprised its prior allies on the issue, Germany, France and Austria, by flipping sides and coming out in support of letting Brussels make the decision for its EU members. Most German politicians and advocacy groups support the prohibition, which applies to trucks weighing more than 7.5 tons. For once, such usual enemies as the German Automobile Association and the Green Party are on the same side of an issue, and even the truckers themselves want to see the rule stay intact. Opponents warn of increased traffic jams, ecological damage, and safety risks should trucking on Sundays be allowed, while those in favor say current regulations are protectionist and damage the economy at large
Šaltinis: dw-world.de
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Rumsfeld Thanks Azerbaijan President

U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld thanked Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliev on Thursday for his country's support in the war on terrorism. more »

The Results of Cooperation of Kazakhstan and Germany

On August 10, in the capital residence the President of Kazakhstan received the chairman of the Eastern committee of the Germany economy more »

Poland, U.S. Discuss How Polish Force in Iraq Will Be Reduced

Poland discussed with the U.S. how the Polish contingent in Iraq will be reduced when the Iraqi government has control in the country more »

Bush Taps Rep. Porter Goss to Head CIA

President Bush has chosen Rep. Porter Goss, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, to be the new director of the CIA more »

US rejects India's request for exemption from fingerprinting

The United States has rejected India's request to exempt ministers and Members of Parliament on a personal visit to that nation from biometric registration more »

Diplomatic scandal

Russia declares Lithuanian diplomat persona non grata more »

"Deep concern"

European Union Demands of Transnistria Restoring Status Quo for Moldovan Schools more »

Georgian Leader Says Moscow Wants Fight

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili said Thursday, after meeting with Secretary of State Colin Powell, that he will not succumb to Russian attempts to provoke a confrontation with his country more »

Poland's premier to discuss Iraq with Bush

Polish Prime Minister Marek Belka speaks to journalists at the airport in Warsaw, Poland, Saturday Aug. 7, 2004, before heading to the U.S. for talks more »

Sudan reaches deal with UN on militia disarmament

Sudan pledges to set up safe areas for civilians in troubled Darfur more »