Farmers staged tractor protests at Tesco stores across Northern Ireland, with the final event at the Enniskillen location on Thursday night. Organised by Farmers For Action, the series included one demonstration in each county.

Protesters parked tractors at the Enniskillen Tesco to highlight industry pressures. Key issues included new inheritance tax threshold laws, substandard imports and rising farming input costs.

The group sent letters to 11 major UK supermarkets posing four questions on inheritance tax thresholds and overseas imports. Five supermarkets replied without clear yes or no answers.

William Taylor, NI Farmers For Action coordinator, noted good reception from Tesco shoppers in Enniskillen. Organisers distributed 300 leaflets and ended with a slow procession of tractors, slurry equipment and trailers past the store entrance.

Taylor raised concerns about UK food self-sufficiency, stating the country could feed only 48 percent of its population without food imports.

Fermanagh farmer Chris Waldie participated to draw attention to food prices, government policies and food security. He pointed to imports with lower welfare standards and less traceability.

Waldie urged shoppers to select UK and Ireland-produced food. On inheritance tax, he argued farms differ from normal businesses as family homes and generational operations, predicting hardship from the policy.