The Sunday Telegraph

EU officials net Marseille fishmonger­s for Latin lapses

- By Rory Mulholland in Paris

FISHMONGER­S in the Vieux-Port area of Marseille are up in arms after inspectors fined them hundreds of euros for breaching EU rules by not displaying the Latin names of fish on stalls.

The European rules on displaying the scientific, Latin name of fish are aimed at providing consumers with better informatio­n about what they eat and have been in place since 2013, but appear to be rarely enforced.

Around 20 government inspectors descended on the seafront Vieux-Port, one of Marseille’s main tourist attraction­s, late last week and examined the numerous stalls where the day’s catch had been laid out for sale.

They fined around a dozen fish sellers sums ranging from €400 (£350) to €1,500 for having only the common fish names on display or not displaying where and how the fish were caught.

“They’re bureaucrat­s who have no idea about realities on the ground. No customer ever asks for a fish using its Latin name,” one fishmonger, who gave her name as Marie, told the BFMTV news channel.

“If the ghosts of Caesar or Nero turn up, they’ll be pleased. If they somehow come back to life at least they will know what the names mean,” quipped another called Hélène.

EU regulation No. 1379/2013 states clearly that “the commercial designa-

Boxing day

tion of the species and its scientific name” must be shown whenever a fish is sold. But none of the Marseille sellers had chosen to put the words Sparus aurata alongside the French word for bream, or Mullus barbatus next to the red mullet they were offering.

Few fishmonger­s in France apply the name rule. At three fishmonger­s in

‘If the ghosts of Caesar or Nero turn up, they’ll be pleased. At least they will know the names’

Paris visited by The Sunday Telegraph, no fish were on sale using their scientific names. The owners said they had a board somewhere in their premises with the name of the fish in Latin and could display it if a customer asked. They said this never happened. All three complied with the rules stating where the fish was caught and if it was from a fish farm or caught wild.

For the fishmonger­s in Marseille, there may be a happy end to their fishy tale. Jean-Claude Gaudin, the mayor of the city, had lunch with President Emmanuel Macron on Friday and told him about the fines.

He said that Mr Macron burst out laughing and promised that the fines would not have to be paid, according to Le Parisien newspaper.

 ??  ?? Hun Sen, the Cambodian Prime Minister, congratula­tes the winning orang-utan after a kick boxing match at the opening of Phnom Penh Safari zoo yesterday.
Hun Sen, the Cambodian Prime Minister, congratula­tes the winning orang-utan after a kick boxing match at the opening of Phnom Penh Safari zoo yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom