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G20 Summit

Agree to disagree? French and British leaders at odds over fishing dispute

France's president Emmanuel Macron and British leader Boris Johnson have met on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Rome. However, their accounts of a brief meeting to discuss the contentious issue of post-Brexit fishing rights differ greatly. 

Despite Britain's spat with France over post-Brexit fishing arrangements, Boris Johnson exchanged friendly greetings with President Macron in Rome and said the disagreement was "small beer" compared with acting on climate change, 31 October, 2021
Despite Britain's spat with France over post-Brexit fishing arrangements, Boris Johnson exchanged friendly greetings with President Macron in Rome and said the disagreement was "small beer" compared with acting on climate change, 31 October, 2021 Ludovic MARIN POOL/AFP
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President Emmanuel Macron's office was optimistic after the French leader met Prime Minister Boris Johnson one-on-one, without aides, for about half an hour on the margins of the G20 summit in Rome.

This came a day after Johnson complained to EU chief Ursula von der Leyen that French threats to trigger reprisals over the fishing rights row were "completely unjustified".

The leaders agreed to work on "practical and operational measures" to resolve the dispute in the coming days, Macron's office said.

They were united on the need for a "de-escalation" with concrete action "as soon as possible" it added, a day after Macron and Johnson gave each other friendly pats on the back at the G20.

Proportionate measures

But Downing Street denied any such agreement, and insisted it was up to Paris to back down on a threat to trigger trade reprisals against British fishing catches and other goods from Tuesday.

As the leaders met, the threat of "proportionate and reversible measures" against Britain was reaffirmed on Twitter Sunday by French Europe minister Clement Beaune.

"If the French government want to come forward with proposals to de-escalate the threats they have made, we would absolutely welcome them," Johnson's spokesman told reporters in Rome.

"Our position has not changed," he said.

France is incensed that Britain and the Channel Islands of Jersey and Guernsey have not issued some French boats licences to fish in their waters since Brexit took full effect at the start of 2021.

Protocol amendment

The dispute has taken time out of both leaders' packed schedules when they are both working hard on the climate change agenda heading into the UN's COP26 meeting in Glasgow.

Johnson will host more than 120 leaders at the summit on Monday and Tuesday, and has repeatedly said that Britain, France and the EU as a whole need to stay focused on the existential threat.

"France is a longstanding ally. It was an open meeting. They had a lot to discuss," Johnson's spokesman said.

But he stressed the UK would continue to process applications by French and other EU fishing vessels to ply its waters based solely on technical data.

"We stand ready to work with the French government and individual fishermen if they have the requisite data. There's no further work to be done."

Johnson's own focus in the Macron meeting was on persuading the EU to amend a post-Brexit protocol governing trade between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the spokesman added.

And he said a strongly worded letter from French Prime Minister Jean Castex, urging EU chief Ursula von der Leyen to punish Britain over Brexit, was "not helpful".

Brexit dispute tool

London is warning it could activate a Brexit dispute tool for the first time, exposing all of the EU to potential UK trade measures, if France executes its threatened actions on Tuesday.

Paris had vowed that unless more licences are approved, it would ban UK boats from unloading their catches at French ports, and even impose checks on all products brought to France from Britain.

For his part, Macron warned Friday that Britain's "credibility" was on the line, accusing London of ignoring the Brexit trade deal agreed with Brussels after years of tortuous negotiations.

"When you spend years negotiating a treaty and then a few months later you do the opposite of what was decided on the aspects that suit you the least, it is not a big sign of your credibility," he told the Financial Times.

(with AFP)

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