'Keep your fish!' French fishermen block British trucks in port
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[April 23, 2021] By
Clotaire Achi and Pascal Rossignol
Boulogne-sur-Mer, France (Reuters) -French
trawlermen angered by delays getting licences to fish inside British
waters blocked lorries carrying UK-landed fish with burning barricades
as they arrived overnight in Europe's largest seafood processing centre.
Britain's trade deal with the European Union following Brexit allowed
the bloc's fishermen to keep fishing deep into British waters, but only
once they had received a license.
Those licenses were expected to be issued swiftly but instead some 80%
of the fleet in the northern Hauts-de-France region, from whose
coastline Britain's southern shores are visible, are still waiting,
fishermen in Boulogne-sur-Mer said.
"We thought it would be a matter of days. Four months on we've barely
moved forwards," said Bruno Margolle, who heads the main fishermen's
cooperative in Boulogne-sur-Mer.
Several dozen fishermen lit flares on the Boulogne docks, blocked trucks
with a barricade of wood pallets and barrels, and put up a sign that
read: "You want to keep your waters??? OK ... So, keep your fish!!!".
The barricade was lifted on Friday, hours before EU regulators approved
100 million euros ($120.52 million) in French aid for the country's
fisheries industry.
The financial support will partially compensate fishermen whose boats
have remained idle due to quota cuts or been barred from accessing UK
waters, as well as fish processing firms hit by supply chains that are
choked in red tape.
Many of the skippers struggling to obtain a license were unable to meet
the British demand for electronic data showing they had fished in UK
waters during the five years running up to Britain's 2016 referendum on
EU membership, the fishermen said.
Britain maintained an evidence-based approach to licensing EU vessels
using information supplied by the European Commission, the British
government's Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA)
said.
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Trucks are seen at "La Gare de Maree" near fish processing plants in
the port of Boulogne-sur-Mer, France, January 11, 2021.
REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
DEFRA said the protest was unjustified and that it had raised its concerns with
French authorities.
The French government said it would speed up efforts to resolve the licensing
issue and urged the European Commission to ensure Britain applied the deal.
BREAKDOWN IN SUPPLY CHAINS
Fishermen in northern France say their livelihoods depend on access to British
waters, where they chase mackerel, whiting, squid and other species. Meanwhile,
British fishermen depend on access to the EU market to sell their product.
About two-thirds of UK-landed fish are exported to the continent. Britain's exit
from the EU's orbit at the end of a post-Brexit transition period led early this
year to a chaotic breakdown in supply chains, which used to see Scottish
scallops and langoustine in French shops barely a day after they were harvested.
Margolle said half the Hauts-de-France fleet had been mostly tied up in port
this year because they could not access UK waters.
"It's not worth going out to sea to lose money," Margolle said.
($1 = 0.8297 euros)
(Reporting by Clotaire Achi in Boulogne-sur-Mer; Richard Lough and Michel Rose
in ParisEditing by Grant McCool and Fances Kerry)
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