French fishermen say accessing British waters a ‘matter of life and death’

A Boulogne-based fisherman told PA that the inability to fish on the British side of the Channel was “catastrophic”.
Fishing boats moored in the port of Boulogne, France (Gareth Fuller/PA)
PA Wire
Sophie Wingate2 November 2021

Fishermen along France’s northern coast have described being granted access to British waters as a “matter of life and death” as talks to settle the row over fishing licences continue.

France has accused UK authorities of failing to honour a post-Brexit deal to grant licences to French boats, though Paris held off threats to impose punitive action against British vessels that could have been implemented on Tuesday.

Jeremy Lhomel, a fisherman based in the coastal town of Boulogne-sur-Mer, said the inability to access British waters was catastrophic for those earning a living from fishing in the Channel

Fishing boats moored in the port of Boulogne, France (Gareth Fuller/PA)
PA Wire

He told the PA news agency: “This situation with the licences, we think there’s a lot of bad faith because we are small family boats, we have three, four people on board, we don’t empty the sea, we deal with very few fish, and for us the situation is catastrophic because we can no longer access these waters.

“For us it’s vital to get these licences so that we can fish; it’s a matter of life or death.”

Lhomel said fishermen working from the port of Boulogne who have not received licences have lost access to “half of the Strait” of Dover – the narrowest part of the Channel.

“We can no longer fish properly,” he said angrily.

The British Government has said it is issuing licences to vessels that can prove they have previously fished in UK waters.

But Lhomel insisted he had sent UK authorities all the evidence possible and noted that small boats lacked relevant tracking systems to prove their presence in British waters.

The fisherman, who is in his 30s, pointed out that all Boulogne fishing boats had previously been in UK waters because of their proximity.

“How can the British Government say that we never fished in British waters?” he said, repeating that it was an act of “bad faith” on the part of the British.

Samuel Deshayes, a trawler owner in Granville, Normandy, also suspected a level of dishonesty among British authorities.

He was dismayed by French President Emmanuel Macron’s move to suspend threats to block British boats from landing their catches in French ports and tighten customs checks from midnight.

Mr Macron said no measures would be imposed before a meeting between the Brexit minister, Lord Frost, and France’s Europe minister, Clement Beaune, in Paris on Thursday.

“We don’t know what to expect. We learn new things every day,” Mr Deshayes told the Associated Press.

“We will not give up until everyone has obtained a licence.”

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