Europe Milk Quota Protest: Police Sprayed With Thousands Of Litres Of Fresh Milk (PHOTOS)

PHOTOS: Protesting Farmers Spray Police With Thousands Of Litres Of Fresh Milk
Police officers are sprayed with milk by the European milk farmers during a demonstration in front of the European Parliament building in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 26, 2012. Farmers drove their tractors into the European Quarter of Brussels on Monday for a two-day demonstration to protest against what they believe are unfair milk prices. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)
Police officers are sprayed with milk by the European milk farmers during a demonstration in front of the European Parliament building in Brussels on Monday, Nov. 26, 2012. Farmers drove their tractors into the European Quarter of Brussels on Monday for a two-day demonstration to protest against what they believe are unfair milk prices. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)

BRUSSELS, Nov 26 (Reuters) - Dairy farmers sprayed thousands of litres of fresh milk at the European Parliament in Brussels on Monday in protest at what they say are excessive milk quotas and prices below the cost of production.

Hundreds of farmers and tractors from across Europe took up position in a park near the European Commission and a square in front of the parliament in the early afternoon, after blocking traffic along several of Brussels' busiest streets.

They then turned their hoses on parliament, a collection of vast marble, glass and steel buildings on a Brussels square, and unleashed torrents of milk, some of it raining down on police and passers-by.

Afterwards they set alight barrels of hay and a pile of tyres, sending plumes of black smoke billowing into the sky. They plan to stay put outside parliament until Tuesday afternoon.

The European Milk Board, which coordinated the two-day protest, said prices with current quotas were putting small farmers out of business.

In Belgium, for example, the board said the wholesale price for a litre of milk was 0.26 euros, but the cost of producing it is 0.40 euros.

The EU is the world's largest milk producer and spends more than 40 percent of its annual 130 billion euro budget paying subsidies and other forms of financial support to farmers, including those in the diary industry.

It sets an annual milk quota - which sits at around 130 million tonnes, too much for EU-consumption - but has agreed to phase that out by 2015.

Farmers have held similar protests in the past, including one in 2009 which led to a small increase in wholesale prices.

On Monday, tractors came from across Belgium as well as neighbouring France, Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. Among a total of nearly 2,500 farmers, around 100 came from Poland, with many other nationalities also present. ($1 = 0.7713 euros) (Reporting By Philip Blenkinsop and Madeline O'Leary; Editing by Luke Baker and Alison Williams)

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