EU warns Britain as French fisherman blockade St Helier
The EU has complained to Britain that the terms of its post-brexit trade deal are being ignored in the deepening dispute over fishing rights off Jersey.
The European Commission said French fishing boats were facing "additional conditions" if they were to carry on operating, in breach of the terms of the agreement hammered out on Christmas Eve.
But in a call with Jersey's chief minister John Le Fondre, Prime Minster Boris Johnson again voiced his "unequivocal support" for the actions taken by the island's government.
He said two Royal Navy patrol boats dispatched to the area on Wednesday would remain in place as a "precautionary measure".
The French authorities said they were sending a pair of police patrol boats as dozens of protesting French fishing vessels gathered off the main port, St Helier.
The row erupted after the Jersey government said French boats would be required to obtain licences to carry on fishing in the island's waters under the terms of the trade deal with the EU which came into force last Friday.
The move provoked a wave of anger among French fishing communities who complained that some boats which had operated there for years were suddenly having their access restricted.
In Brussels, a spokeswoman for the European Commission said "additional conditions" attached to the new licences represented a breach of the trade deal.
"We have... indicated to the
UK that we see that the provisions of the EU/UK Trade and Co-operation Agreement, that we recently agreed, have not been met there, have not been respected," the spokeswoman said.
Jersey's external relations minister, Ian Gorst, said representatives of the island's government were meeting the French fishermen in an attempt to defuse the worsening row.
Local fishermen reported around 60 French boats had gathered off St Helier early on Thursday, with some entering the harbour before leaving after an hour.dimitri Rogoff, who heads a group of Normandyfishermen,insisted they were not seeking to blockade the port.
"This isn't an act of war. It's an act of protest," he said.