Las Vegas Review-Journal

France seeks to bar British fishing boats

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PARIS — France announced Wednesday that it will bar British fishing boats from some French ports starting next week if no deal is reached with the U.K. in a dispute over fishing licenses.

Since the U.K. left the economic orbit of the European Union at the start of the year, relations between London and Paris have become increasing­ly frayed.

France vehemently protested the decision last month by the U.K. and the Channel Island of Jersey to refuse dozens of French fishing boats a license to operate in their territoria­l waters. France considers the restrictio­ns as contrary to the post-brexit agreement that the British government signed when it left the EU. Dozens of other French fishing boats did get such a license.

Jersey, which is only 14 miles off the French coast, is a British Crown dependency outside of the U.K. As such, it has its own powers with regards to who is allowed to fish in its territoria­l waters. It has granted licenses based on its interpreta­tion of the U.K.-EU trade deal, and has accused France of acting disproport­ionately.

After weeks of negotiatio­ns, British authoritie­s have issued more fishing licenses but that still only accounts for 50 percent of what France believes it “is entitled to,” French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said Wednesday.

The French ministers for Europe and for maritime affairs said in a joint statement Wednesday that if no agreement is reached by Nov. 2, France will bar British fishing boats from designated ports and tighten customs, security and other controls on any British boats and trucks traveling between France and Britain.

And then in the coming weeks, France said that it “doesn’t exclude” measures targeting energy supplies to Britain, the statement said.

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