France threatens to cut off power to Jersey as U.K. sends in the Royal Navy, in post-Brexit spat over shellfish
Jersey #Jersey
© Gary Grimshaw/AP French fishing vessels block the port of St. Helier in Jersey on Thursday.
LONDON — Just a day after the foreign secretaries of the world’s richest economies met at the G-7 summit here to applaud themselves for the return of international diplomacy, France and Britain find themselves sending armed naval vessels to sea in a spat over shellfish.
“We’re ready for war,” blared the Daily Mail tabloid in all caps. Not over cod, certainly? But never underestimate the hot politics of fishing rights. It almost scuttled the Brexit trade deal between Britain and the European Union — and the after-effects are still being sorted out today.
As of Thursday morning, Britain has sent not one but two Royal Navy ships — the HMS Tamar and HMS Severn — to the little island of Jersey in the English Channel. Jersey is a British Crown dependency, although it’s about 14 miles off the French coast.
France also responded, deploying the Military Ops ship Athos, now steaming toward the island to carry out a “patrol mission.” A second French vessel, the FS Themis, was reported en route.
Images of the harbor of Saint Helier on island of Jersey showed dozens of French fishing trawlers and dredgers bobbing in the waters inside and just off the port, firing smoke and light flares.
The French fleet is angry because Jersey is requiring skippers who want a license to rake the seafloor deploy the most modern equipment and also prove that they have fished in the island’s waters in previous years — requirements that some captains complain are expensive or hard to fulfill.
The French fisherfolk are threatening to maintain a “blockade” the harbor and stop cargo ships from entering or exiting. In one scene, a French boat can be seen ramming another vessel.
Josh Dearing, owner of the The Jersey Catch fishing company, told the Press Association news agency: “I looked from the shore this morning and it was just like a sea of red lights and flares already going off at sea. It was like an invasion.”
English and Jersey fishing boats are also in the waters, creating the potential for conflict. It would not be the first time that British and French fleet tangled. In 2018, in an episode dubbed the “Great Scallop War,” the antagonists purposefully slammed into each other’s boats in skirmish over fishing rights.
War rhetoric has been a recurrent theme. French fishermen earlier complained that their own government had “declared war” on them by pursuing plans for an offshore wind farm to the south of Jersey.
This week, the attention shifted toward escalating tensions with Britain, when France’s Minister for the Sea, Annick Girardin, threatened retaliatory measures over post-Brexit fishing rights.
“Regarding Jersey, I remind you of the delivery of electricity along underwater cables,” she told lawmakers, noting that the island state gets most of its power from mainland France.
“We’ll do it if we have to,” Girardin said, without going into details.
Jersey — officially the Bailiwick of Jersey — is not a member nation of the United Kingdom, but a self-governing British Crown Dependency, and Britain provides for its defense. The 100,000 residents speak English (and often French), use the pound sterling and mostly make their money by providing offshore financial services.
Unlike in Britain, the rising tensions did not dominate the news in France on Thursday, with news channels and newspapers instead debating topics like the complicated legacy of Napoléon Bonaparte.
Speaking to the Agence-France Presse news agency, France’s junior minister for European affairs, Clément Beaune, vowed that France “won’t be intimidated.”
He said he had earlier spoken to David Frost, the British cabinet minister responsible for relations with the European Union.
“Our wish is not to have tensions, but to have a quick and full application of the (Brexit) deal,” said Beaune.
Don Thompson, president of Jersey Fishermen’s Association, told The Washington Post that the French were deploying “intimidating and bullying tactics.”
The threat to cut off electricity to the island would, if carried out, have huge consequences. “Hospitals would close, babies would die in hospitals, it’s not something taken lightly,” he said.
Thompson described the scene on Thursday morning: he said there were about 100 French trawlers sitting in the mouth of local harbor, and two U.K. Royal Navy ships and a French warship on the scene. “So there’s a little bit of tension.”
He said that the French boats were “stopping the food supply chain” as the “big ferry that sails between here and the mainland, carrying 95 percent of our food, is stuck in the port.”
The French fishermen are upset that they now have to get licenses from the Jersey authority, which have various conditions, including on the styles and types of fishing equipment allowed.
“We’re saying to our government, if you remove conditions from their license, there’s no point in any of us having licenses, that’s what licenses are there for,” Thompson said. “We don’t always like conditions on licenses, but they are there so we have a future and fish stocks are cared for properly.”
Jersey is a unique entity. Though it lies closer to France than England, it is not a part of the European Union, though before Brexit, it was effectively treated as if it were in the E.U. when it came to the free trade of goods.
Now that Britain is out of the bloc and new Brexit trade agreements and access rights are coming into force, locals in Jersey are feeling an impact.
Thompson said that, since the start of the year, French fleets have been “fishing in our waters, taking 100 tons of scallops every week while our boats have been banned from landing the same scallops into the E.U. because of the downgrading of our waters … That’s left our fishermen here under hardship because they can’t land their catch and export it to France, but they watch as French have taken 1,500 tons of those same scallops out of those waters and land them freely back into the E.U. — there’s a level of discrimination that’s already come into the situation.”
Noack reported from Paris.