Business World

US patrol boat strayed into Canadian waters chasing migrants — fishermen

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OTTAWA — A US border patrol boat strayed into Canadian territoria­l waters while chasing “illegal immigrants” off the coast of Maine and Nova Scotia, Canadian fishermen said Wednesday.

Laurence Cook, chair of the Grand Manan Fishermen’s Associatio­n, said on Facebook that a US border patrol launch out of Maine attempted to stop a Canadian fishing vessel in Canadian waters. Grand Manan is a Canadian island in the Gulf of Maine, right off the coast that hosts the border between the United States and Canada.

Mr. Cook said the incident took place on June 24 near Machias Seal Island, a tiny, rocky outcrop a dozen miles south of Grand Manan with rich lobster grounds, and whose sovereignt­y is disputed by Washington, although the Canadian Coast Guard maintains a lighthouse there.

According to Mr. Cook, the Canadian fishing captain, Nick Brown, informed the US vessel that “he was a Canadian vessel legally fishing in Canadian waters.”

“Typical American bullies,” said Mr. Cook, who said he was “not surprised to see the Americans trying to push people around.”

Ties between Canada and the United States have been strained since President Donald Trump slapped tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, citing US national security, with Mr. Trump calling Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “very dishonest” and “weak” after a spat at the G7 meeting in Quebec last month.

“They claim to be looking for illegal immigrants,” said Mr. Cook in his Facebook posting.

“Pure bullshit, to be illegal they would have to be in sovereign waters and they know it.”

The Canadian Foreign Ministry said it had launched an inquiry into the incident off Machias Seal Island, which Canada insists is its territory. “Canada’s sovereignt­y over the Machias Seal Island and the surroundin­g waters is long- standing and has a strong foundation in internatio­nal law,” said Global Affairs spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Reid, adding that Ottawa has asked US authoritie­s for more details on the incident.

While the State Department did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment, a Customs and Border Protection spokespers­on said the “US Border Patrol was conducting regular patrol operation to enforce immigratio­n laws and other violations of federal law that they may encounter in the course of their duties.

“The US Border Patrol does not patrol for fisheries violations or boating violations which are enforced by the US Coast Guard,” the spokespers­on said.

“Additional­ly Border Patrol does not board Canadian vessels in the Grey Zone without consent or probable cause and only conduct interviews as a vessel runs parallel to it, bow to stern.”

Mr. Trump has made cracking down on illegal immigratio­n a cornerston­e of his administra­tion’s policy, and his now-abandoned “zero tolerance” practice of separating migrant parents from their children at the Mexican border triggered condemnati­on worldwide. He has also bolstered border security at the northern frontier with Canada, and the American Civil Liberties Union said US police had been setting up more checkpoint­s on roads to the Canadian border to check people’s citizenshi­p. —

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