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Scallop wars: British fishermen ask for protection from the French

The Local/AFP
The Local/AFP - [email protected]
Scallop wars: British fishermen ask for protection from the French
Photo: AFP

British fisherman have asked the government to help protect them after they clashed with French boats in the English Channel on Tuesday in the latest skirmish in a long-running battle over scallop stocks.

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The latest flare-up between French and British fishermen on Tuesday in the years-long war over the prized shellfish saw stone-throwing, insults and dangerous manoeuvres on the high seas.

The British were heavily outnumbered at five boats to around 35 French vessels, according to maritime official Ingrid Parot, and were eventually chased from the scallop-rich waters of the Baie de Seine area of Normandy.

Some of the boats rammed others -- leaving holes in three vessels, footage from local channel France 3 Normandie showed -- as the angry French fishermen threw smoke-bombs and hurled insults at British rivals.

Barrie Deas, chief executive of Britain's National Federation of Fishermen's Organisations is demanding protection and has called for talks.

"We are advising all parties to be calm as from the video clips some vessels are manoeuvring very dangerously," he told AFP. 

"We have raised the matter with the British government and asked for protection for our vessels which are fishing legitimately," he added.

"The deeper issues behind the clashes should be settled by talking around the table, not on the high seas where people could be hurt."

The skirmish took place more than 12 nautical miles out to sea where the British are legally allowed to fish all year round.

But their French counterparts, restricted to fishing for scallops between October 1 and May 15, have accused the British of depleting stocks and want 
them to face the same rules.

Tensions have been high between British and French fishermen for some 15 years over the issue, leading to angry disputes that have been dubbed "Scallop Wars".

The two sides have reached annual agreements over the past five years but the French blocked a deal this year, according to Normandy fishieries chief Dimitri Rogoff, who said they had had enough.

"For the Brits, it's an open bar -- they fish when they want, where they want, and as much as they want," he complained.

The problem has grown worse over the past 15 years as English, Scottish and Irish boats have upped their catches considerably, he added.

"We don't want to stop them from fishing, but they could at least wait until October 1 so that we can share," he said.

Normandy fishermen also complain that the British use much bigger trawlers -- 30 metres (98 feet) or more -- around double the size of their own, which use more artisan techniques.

The biggest British vessels can freeze the scallops directly on board.

"Scallops are a flagship product for Normandy, a primary resource and a highly sensitive issue," said Rogoff.

If Britain crashes out of the European Union next year without a deal, this would solve the problem for the Normans, he added. 

"After March 29, 2019 they would be treated as a third party and would no longer have access to these areas," he said.

The pro-Brexit organisation Fishing for Leave has however denounced the "hypocrisy" of French fishermen, charging that they have caught 60 percent of the fish in British waters over the past 40 years.

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