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CRIME

Impounded British fishing trawler leaves France

The British trawler impounded for a week by France has sailed from the northern port of Le Havre after receiving permission to leave, just ahead of crunch talks aimed at resolving the standoff between the UK and France over fishing licences.

The Cornelis Gert Jan getting ready to leave Le Havre.
The Cornelis Gert Jan getting ready to leave Le Havre. Photo: Sameer Al Doumy/AFP

The British-registered Cornelis Gert Jan, which is accused of gathering two tons of scallops in French waters without a proper licence, left the port just after 5pm on Wednesday, AFP reported.

The lawyer for the ship’s captain, Mathieu Croix, said a court in the nearby city of Rouen had allowed it to leave without posting any financial guarantee.

He told AFP that the court had rejected the state’s demand that the trawler remain impounded until a €150,000 bond was deposited. The vessel’s captain Jondy Ward was present in court for the hearing.

READ ALSO Why are France and the UK fighting about fish?

“It is a good decision, of a kind that will allow the tensions to drop,” said the lawyer. “French justice is independent from political pressure,” he added.

Ward then joined his seven crew members to begin the journey back, smiling at journalists on the shore.

He still faces a trial in Le Havre on August 11th, 2022 on charges of non-authorised fishing in French waters by a boat from outside the European Union, which carry a maximum fine of €75,000.

The vessel is owned by Scottish firm Macduff Shellfish. Director Andrew Brown previously told AFP he believed that the boat was correctly licensed, however it was later reported that the vessel appeared to have been missed off the UK government’s list of licensed boats.

The vessel’s departure came the day before British Brexit Minister David Frost travelled to Paris to meet French Europe Minister Clement Beaune to try and find a solution to the dispute over post-Brexit fishing licences for French vessels.

Their meeting is set to be held behind closed doors and no press conference is planned.

French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said that on Friday there would also be a European Commission meeting on the issue during a visit by Frost but this is yet to be confirmed by Brussels.

The dispute over post-Brexit fishing rights has strained already troubled relations between Paris and London following Britain’s exit from the European Union and has threatened to escalate into a full-blown trade war.

France has threatened to ban British boats from unloading their catches at French ports and to subject all British imports to inspections.

Under a deal agreed by Britain and the EU late last year, European fishing vessels can continue to ply UK waters if they can prove they operated there in the past.

But dozens of French boats have had their applications to operate in the the waters off the UK coast and around the UK crown dependency of Jersey rejected.

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POLITICS

State of emergency lifted in New Caledonia

France on Tuesday lifted a state of emergency in its Pacific territory of New Caledonia but is maintaining a curfew and sending hundreds of paramilitary reinforcements after two weeks of unrest in which seven people died and hundreds were injured.

State of emergency lifted in New Caledonia

The French presidency said restrictions had been eased to let the main pro-independence FLNKS party hold meetings and for local representatives to try to get road barricades removed.

Paris enforced the state of emergency after riots erupted over French plans to reform voting rights in the territory. Several hundred police and military reinforcements have already been sent to New Caledonia.

Authorities said another 480 paramilitary gendarmes would leave France for the territory “within hours”. A night curfew from 6:00 pm to 6:00 am and a ban on alcohol sales will remain, the French government office in New Caledonia said.

While the archipelago has been quieter, some disturbances were reported in Vallee-du-Tir district of the main city Noumea. There have been nearly 500 arrests since the unrest started.

Long queues of traffic have built up in daylight hours but many roads, including to the international airport, are still closed with hundreds of burned out cars. The airport is to remain closed until June 2. Authorities said 600 police would be used to clear access to the Medipole hospital.

The lifting of the blockades is “the necessary condition for the opening of concrete and serious negotiations”, the French presidency said in a statement, which announced the lifting of the state of emergency from 5 am Tuesday (local time).

President Emmanuel Macron flew to the Pacific archipelago on Thursday in a bid to defuse the crisis.

The first French tourists were evacuated Saturday from Noumea aboard military aircraft headed for Australia and New Zealand. Australia and New Zealand had already begun repatriating their nationals on Tuesday.

In total, around 3,500 troops have been deployed to the archipelago, where two police have died.

Possible referendum

New Caledonia has been ruled from Paris since the 1800s, but many indigenous Kanaks resent France’s power over their islands and want fuller autonomy or independence.

France is planning to give voting rights to thousands of non-indigenous long-term residents, something Kanaks say would dilute the influence of their votes.

Macron pledged during his lightning trip to New Caledonia that the planned voting reforms “will not be forced through”.

“Violence should never be allowed to take root,” Macron said at the end of his visit.

The CCAT pro-independence group organising the protests has not called off the roadblocks but offered to ease the chaos so that fuel and medicines could be delivered.

The FLNKS party reiterated on Saturday its demand for the withdrawal of the voting reforms after meeting with Macron.

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