Trawler released ahead of fresh talks in Paris over fishing crisis

Brexit negotiator David Frost also to meet Maros Sefcovic on Friday

The Scottish scallop trawler “Cornelis-Gert Jan” leaves the northern French port of Le Havre on Thursday after  following days of detention amid a post-Brexit dispute over fishing rights between France and Great Britain. Photo by Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP via Getty Images
The Scottish scallop trawler “Cornelis-Gert Jan” leaves the northern French port of Le Havre on Thursday after following days of detention amid a post-Brexit dispute over fishing rights between France and Great Britain. Photo by Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP via Getty Images

The UK's chief Brexit negotiator David Frost will meet France's Europe minister Clement Beaune in Paris on Thursday in an attempt to end a bitter dispute over post-Brexit fishing rights.

France has threatened sanctions over what it perceives as a refusal to issue licences to its trawlers to operate in UK waters.

The UK Government insisted the overwhelming majority of applications for licences have been granted.

French president Emmanuel Macron has delayed the imposition of punitive measures while talks between the UK, France and the European Commission take place.

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But the French government has insisted the measures — which could include a ban on British trawlers landing their catches in French ports and tighter customs checks to hamper cross-Channel trade — remain “on the table” if a deal cannot be reached.

Mr Frost will follow his talks with Mr Beaune by heading to Brussels on Friday to meet European Commission vice-president Maros Sefcovic.

French government spokesman Gabriel Attal underlined that the threat of sanctions remained: “We will see what comes with those meetings.

“As you know, the control measures that we announced are still suspended but all options are on the table and we may need to implement those measures if we do not reach an agreement.

“We are just waiting for one thing: for the UK to respect the deal that they signed,” he said on Wednesday

Under the Brexit deal, European Union boats which can show they have fished in British waters in at least four of the years from 2012 to 2016 are eligible for a licence.

Some 1,831 applications for licences have been received, with 1,793 issued.

The main source of contention has been for smaller vessels, the under 12-metre category fishing between six and 12 nautical miles off the coast, where 50 applications have been received — all from French vessels — but just 19 have been issued.

The British trawler which was impounded by France amid the crisis in cross-Channel relations has been released by the authorities.

The Scottish-registered scallop dredger Cornelis Gert Jan left Le Havre on Wednesday evening after being held there since last week, when France accused it of fishing in its waters without a proper licence.

Blue, white and red

The blue, white and red trawler departed the quayside after dusk and location data suggested it was in the English Channel.

The release of the boat came after its captain, Jondy Ward, had appeared at the Court of Appeal in Rouen earlier on Wednesday.

Mr Ward explained that French maritime police detained the trawler last week for not being on a European register when it was fishing off the Normandy coast.

The skipper said he did not know if it was an error on the part of UK or French officials.

“We had everything in order on the bridge, as far as I was concerned we had everything in place to be legal,” he said.

He said the boat was “definitely” caught in the middle of the Franco-British spat over post-Brexit fishing arrangements.

The fishing row is just one of the issues Lord Frost will be raising during his talks in Paris and Brussels.

The main dispute between the UK and European Union is over Northern Ireland’s post-Brexit trading arrangements.

Talks are continuing between the UK and EU over the Northern Ireland Protocol, the part of the Brexit divorce deal which avoided a hard border with Ireland.

The deal effectively keeps Northern Ireland inside the EU’s single market for goods, resulting in some checks for products crossing the Irish Sea from Great Britain, which left the single market.

Mr Frost has claimed the conditions for using Article 16 — allowing parts of the deal to be suspended — have been met because of the difficulties being caused.

The UK wants an end to the European Court of Justice’s oversight role, something that Brussels has said is impossible.

European Commission executive vice-president Frans Timmermans told ITV’s Peston: “I think Mr Frost knows very well that this is not possible for the European Union.

“I know he knows full well that whenever the internal market is involved, the ultimate arbitrator is the European Court of Justice.”

But he said the European Commission had been “bending over backwards” to reach an agreement with the UK on the protocol.

On Wednesday, Taoiseach Micheál Martin told the Dáil “it would be irresponsible, it would be unwise, and it would be reckless to invoke article 16 as a response to the proposals from the European Commission”. - PA