Brexit: Great Britain appoints French ambassador

Brexit dispute escalates
Great Britain appoints a French ambassador

The fronts in the fisheries dispute have hardened. And there is no improvement in sight for the time being, both sides emphasized that.

© David Keyton / DPA

The dispute over fishing rights in the English Channel has reached a new level of escalation. After martial tones from the French side, Great Britain ordered the ambassador.

In the Brexit dispute between London and Paris over fishing rights in the English Channel, the British government summoned the French ambassador to the Foreign Office. She should explain the “disappointing and disproportionate threats against Great Britain and the Channel Islands” on Friday, said British Foreign Minister Liz Truss on Thursday evening. France had previously arrested a British fishing boat for allegedly lacking licenses.

Meanwhile, the tone in the conflict is intensifying: “It’s not a war, but a skirmish,” said the French minister for marine affairs, Annick Girardin, on the radio station “RTL” on Thursday. “We have fishing rights. We have to defend them and we defend them.”

European State Secretary Clément Beaune repeated the threat on “CNews” that British boats would in future be subjected to strict customs and security controls. “We will show no tolerance, no indulgence.” Paris wants to get London to fish more French boats in British waters.

France threatens – Great Britain is outraged

Again and again France threatens to stop electricity deliveries to Great Britain. The British government was outraged and is now considering countermeasures. The French project is very likely not in accordance with international law and the Brexit Treaty, stressed Brexit Minister David Frost.

A UK government spokesman said: “We are ready to respond appropriately.” London had communicated its concerns to the EU and France. “The threats made yesterday evening are disappointing, disproportionate and fundamentally not what we would expect from a close ally and partner,” said the spokesman.

Because it allegedly did not have the necessary licenses to fish in French waters, a British boat was directed to Le Havre by the French Coast Guard on Wednesday, Girardin tweeted. There is a fine in the room and the confiscation of the catch. The “BBC” commented: “This is called a shot across the bow.” If there is now no fundamental agreement, British boats should no longer be allowed to sail to certain French ports from Monday. Trucks should also be checked carefully.

Quarrel plays with age-old resentment

The fishing dispute between the two countries has been simmering for a long time. The background to this is the question of how many foreign fishermen will be allowed to catch in British waters after Brexit. During the negotiations on the British trade pact with the EU, this was the most controversial issue, which at times seemed to make an agreement almost impossible. On the EU side, it was above all the French who were adamant, the issue has always been treated extremely emotionally and plays with age-old resentment against the other country.

Paris takes the position that too few licenses for French boats have been granted, especially in the fish-rich waters around the Channel Island of Jersey, which belongs to the British Crown but not to the United Kingdom. In early May, dozens of French fishermen blocked the Jersey port of Saint Helier in protest, and both London and Paris each sent two warships to the island. The UK government stresses that 98 percent of all requests from EU fishermen have been granted. On the other hand, Minister Girardin complained that it was only 90 percent – and the missing ten percent were “obviously” French.

In Great Britain the tones are less martial, but nobody wants to give in. About half a year before the presidential election in France, the French government is politicizing the issue, said the head of the British association of fisheries organizations, Barrie Deas, the broadcaster “BBC Radio 4”. “It’s a bit strange because the French fleets fish a lot more in British waters than we do in their waters,” said Deas. The ship owner sees himself as a victim of a major conflict. The “Cornelis Gert Jan” was legally looking for scallops. The ship is now a “pledge,” said MacDuff Shellfish boss Andrew Brown.

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