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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
World

French fishermen protest, threaten to cut off Jersey's electricity

French fishing boats protest in front of Saint Helier harbour off the British island of Jersey in May 2021. (File photo) © AFP/Sameer Al-Doumy

A new protest over post-Brexit rights for fishing vessels to access Jersey's waters has been held in France. The French fishermen have threatened to cut an underwater cable that supplies the island of Jersey with electricity.

More than 100 fishermen and local politicians gathered on Saturday to protest at plans to restrict access to the number of French fishing boats in the Channel Island waters from 1st of October.

They met on Armanville beach in Normandy, where the power cable which supplies the island of Jersey lands.

The move follows the intervention of French Maritime Minister Annick Girardin in May, who threatened to cut off Jersey's electricity over the restrictions initially introduced.

"These fishermen have absolutely no idea if they will be able to continue their trade, if they will be able to access these fishing zones which are vital for them", Bertrand Sorre, LREM deputy for La Manche department, said.

Marc Delahaye, director of the Normandy fisheries committee, fears that after the 30th of September French fishermen will find themselves a large number of boats tied up at the quayside.

"That's when we'll have an explosion and afterwards there will be a destruction of the naval sector, at the Granville auction, the transporters, the equipment suppliers... This is where it becomes unbearable".

Recent disputes

The protest is the latest in a dispute over access to Jersey's waters for French fishing boats, where they do half their fishing, just off the coast.

In May, dozens of boats from Normandy and Brittany blockaded Saint-Hélier harbour in Jersey, forcing the Royal Navy to send two patrol boats before the situation was resolved.

An explosive subject throughout the negotiations on the conditions of the UK's exit from the EU, access by European fishermen to British waters remains a subject of tension despite the agreement on post-Brexit relations reached between London and Brussels, which has been in force since the 1st of January.

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