France says it will fight for every UK fishing licence as European
deadline looms
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[December 09, 2021]
By Richard Lough
PARIS (Reuters) -A day ahead of a European
deadline, France said it was still waiting for Britain to approve nearly
100 licences for its fishermen to operate in UK territorial waters and
off Jersey and that last-gasp negotiations were ongoing.
Fishing rights plagued Brexit talks for years and continue to poison
relations between Britain and France, not because of their economic
importance but because of their political resonance for both sides.
Britain and the EU agreed to set up a licensing system to grant fishing
vessels access to each other's waters when Britain left the bloc. But
France says it has not been given the full number it is due, while
Britain says only those lacking the correct documentation have not been
granted.
Annick Girardin, France's seas minister, said her government would fight
for each licence.
"Nobody should be left stranded on the dock," she told senators.
However Girardin rowed back on past threats of retaliation by the French
government and said any reprisal acts would be taken at a European level
depending on Britain's position on Friday. This is the deadline set by
the European Commission for London to accept or reject the pending
license requests.
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She said that if the deadlock persisted, France would urge the
commission to take the matter for arbitration by a committee of
British and European representatives that oversees the
implementation of the Brexit trade agreement.
If that failed, France would push for the commission to launch
litigation proceedings, a move the minister said would take time.
Girardin said 53 of the missing licences were to fish in the water
6-12 miles off Britain's shores, most of which were sought by boats
that had replaced older vessels and that Britain says cannot prove a
history of fishing in its waters.
Paris has accused London repeatedly of acting in bad faith and
failing to honour the post-Brexit trade deal. Britain says it is
respecting the post-Brexit arrangements.
Last month, French fishermen temporarily blockaded the port of
Calais and Channel Tunnel rail link in an effort to disrupt trade
between Britain and the continent.
(Reporting by Richard Lough;Editing by Alison Williams, Nick Macfie
and Frances Kerry)
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