The New Zealand Herald

Torpedoes: Battle over channel scallops

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reportedly chased away British boats from the Bay of Seine, an area near Normandy known for its scallop-rich waters. French officials said there were about 35 French vessels and five British ones caught in the flare-up.

“We were were surrounded. They fired rocket flares, petrol bombs. Suddenly there was smoke everywhere and the air smelled like gunpowder and sulfur,” said Ciaran Cardell, 31, a British fisherman who fled the scene with the other British boats in the area.

“There were boats on fire, one of their boats got sunk. That’s the closest I’ve ever been to being at war. It was like a battle on the high seas. It was crazy,” he said in a telephone interview from his boat, which was still at sea, but floating closer to England than France.

British Prime Minister Theresa May yesterday said that she hoped for an “amicable solution” to the dispute.

“It’s what we want and it’s what France wants and we will be working on that,” she told reporters during her visit to Nigeria.

French officials have said that they will send more boats to police the area, if necessary.

For the past several years, the two sides in the wars over the humble scallop came to an agreement: Larger British vessels — those measuring 15m and over — would stay out of closed French fishing waters in exchange for more fishing rights. But this year that deal broke down.

French fishermen accuse the British sailors of having an unfair advantage and plundering their stocks, while the Brits counter that they were doing nothing wrong and accuse the French of piracy.

Normandy fishing chief Dimitri Rogoff said the French vessels were indeed trying to stop the British from fishing in the waters, but just until the season got started again.

“For the Brits, it’s an open bar — they fish when they want, where they want, and as much as they want,” he told the BBC. “We don’t want to stop them from fishing, but they could at least wait until October 1 so that we can share. Scallops are a flagship product for Normandy, a primary resource and a highly sensitive issue,” he said.

Britain’s Government, meanwhile, said in a statement that the British fishermen were “operating in an area they are legally entitled to fish”. Sheryll Murray, a British Conservati­ve Party lawmaker, tweeted: “This is disgracefu­l treatment of British vessels who were doing nothing but trying to earn a living.”

Lieutenant Ingrid Parrot, a spokeswoma­n for France’s regional maritime authority, said the French fishermen were “frustrated” that the British were fishing while they cannot.

Cardell, the British fisherman, said he sympathise­d with his French counterpar­ts.

“Usually the big boats aren’t allowed there until November 1st, which gives all of us small boats a chance. It usually goes like this: We get their first, we get a month on it, then the French boats come, then the big boats get to come and clean up what’s left. There was no agreement made [this year] so the big boats are there now and by the time the French get there, there will be nothing left,” he said. “I can understand their frustratio­n, but not the way they’ve gone about it,” he said.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? British and French fishermen clash off France’s northern coast this week.
Photo / AP British and French fishermen clash off France’s northern coast this week.
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