UK patrol vessels to remain off Jersey as French fishers end protest
Boris Johnson said two Royal Navy patrol vessels would remain in place around Jersey as French fishers ended a six-hour protest at St Helier’s harbour in an escalating dispute over post-Brexit fishing rules.
The French flotilla of about 60 boats departed after a delegation met Jersey authorities. “It’s rubbish, I’m sorry,” said Cyril Piraud, one fisher who was part of the delegation, according to a reporter from the Ouest-France newspaper who was with the Normandy boats.
“I’m not sure why we even went to see them. They are putting all the blame on the French government, who they say did not provide them with the right information. If we do nothing, we’re going to end up being squeezed out, little by little. This can only be sorted out on dry land now. The [French] minister has to carry out her threats.”
In a phone call to the chief minister of the island, John Le Fondré, his deputy and Ian Gorst, the external affairs minister, Johnson reiterated his “unequivocal support” for their efforts to resolve the Brexit row.
The head of the local fishers’ association, Don Thomson, said he was “confident” the Jersey government sent the ships off without concessions but with more time to get their paperwork submitted for the new fishing licences.
HMS Severn and HMS Tamar were deployed off Jersey in the early hours of Thursday as a “precautionary measure” as French fishers upped the ante in the dispute over Jersey’s new fishing restrictions.
The row erupted on Tuesday night when the French minister for maritime affairs, Annick Girardin, warned that the island’s electricity supply could be turned off in retaliation against the lack of access for the French fishing fleet to its waters.
In an apparent tit-for-tat development, France also sent two of its gendarmerie patrol boats, PCG Athos and PCG Themis, on Thursday morning to the border waters to “monitor the situation and guarantee the safety of people at sea”.
About 60 French vessels amassed off the coast of St Helier at around 4.30am. HMS Severn and HMS Tamar observed about a mile away as they entered the harbour in a sea of red flare smoke at about 7am.
Downing Street said the patrol vessels, which are armed, were sent to “monitor the situation”, but some criticised the decision as a heavy-handed reaction designed to boost the Conservatives’ credentials on the day of local elections across Britain.
The protest was largely peaceful although initially the Commodore Goodwill freight ship was trapped and unable to leave the harbour.
There was also a skirmish when a French boat rammed a British vessel as it tried to move into the harbour at around 7am, witnesses said.
Dimitri Rogoff, who heads the group of Normandy fishers, said about 50 boats from French ports along the western Normandy coast joined the protest on Thursday morning, gathering their fleet off St Helier.
They were joined by several Jersey fishers including Chris Le Masurier, the owner of the Jersey Oyster Company, who described conditions placed upon the new post-Brexit fishing licences issued to Breton and Norman fishers as “insulting and discriminatory”.