×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Sunday
28
Dec 2025
weather symbol
Athens 13°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> World

Boat set alight as UK fishermen hold anti-EU protests

"We're not actually in control of our own territorial waters"

Newsroom April 10 09:42

“Burn the flag!” chanted the crowd in a British fishing port on Sunday, as a boat adorned with the EU flag was set on fire in one of a series of Brexit rallies held around Britain.

Leading Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage looked on as the flames leaped into the sky in Whitstable, south-east England, where protesters set off orange flares and blew horns.

Around 14 fishing vessels with Britain’s Union Jack flag and “Brexit Betrayal: Take Back Control Now” banners joined in.

“We’re not actually in control of our own territorial waters,” said Farage, a lawmaker in the European Parliament.

“We’re catching far less than half the fish that the British fleet should be, and we’re operating under a crack-pot set of regulations that could have only been designed by bureaucrats in Brussels,” he said.

Touring the port aboard a fishing boat and waving to supporters, Farage said the British government had been “really weak-kneed” overfishing policy.

While Brexit negotiations are ongoing, London and Brussels have agreed to a transition period after Britain formally leaves the bloc in March 2019, which will run until December 2020 and during which much of the relationship will remain the same.

Many British fishermen feel betrayed by this arrangement, arguing that they had been promised more fishing rights.

“The ultimate symbol of sovereignty is being in control of your country, and that includes being in control of your territorial waters, and this is a shocking, abject surrender,” Farage told AFP.

The former UK Independence Party leader had vocal support among those aboard the fishing vessels, although the crowd of a couple of hundred people gathered on the shore included many carrying pro-EU, anti-Farage signs and with the bloc’s flag draped around their shoulders.

Dismissing them as “cretins”, Farage said his suited security guard was necessary to avoid the “violent, pro-EU leftists” who are “not interested in democracy”.

‘Traitors’

The Europhile crowd included Brendan McSweeney, a professor at London?s Royal Holloway University who lives in Whitstable.

“I feel sorry for a lot of the fishermen, they’re being manipulated,” he said, arguing that the EU could not be blamed for the decline in the British fishing industry.

“A motley collection of little boats, there’s a complete failure to invest,” he said from the shore.

The number of UK fishing boats has fallen by 29 percent since 1996 to the current total of 6,191.

One of the protest organizers, Aaron Brown, said he was worried that the transition period could threaten his livelihood as Britain will no longer have a say in EU rules.

“Within that 21 months, we have to abide by all the EU law but after Brexit the EU could cull what’s left of our fleet. They can do that by enforcing detrimental legislation to see us off, and then that would allow them to claim the resources,” he said.

One woman, who did not give her name because she was concerned others would be prejudiced against her, said the fishing industry would be hit hard by Brexit.

“It’s a tragedy that fishermen have been led to believe this, because they are going to find themselves in an appalling position when they realize that Britain has left… and they won’t get their rights back,” she said.

Despite their concerns for the future, the protesters were confident as they posed with Farage moments before the wooden boat was set on fire.

“Traitors!” shouted one woman as arguments broke out with the pro-EU crowd, while a little girl joined in with a cry of “burn it!”

Caroline Fischer, 29, who wore a “Bollocks to Brexit” sticker on her top, was visiting from London and admitted she struggled to find anyone in her “pro-Europe enclave” who voted for Brexit.

“You come down here and it is different, it’s good to hear different viewpoints,” she said.

>Related articles

Shocking: No prosecution of the Bob Vylan band for the anti-Israel slogans at the Glastonbury Festival

Hadjivassiliou: The Trilateral proved that the cooperation between Greece, Israel and Cyprus has strategic depth

Kefalogiannis: We are creating 13 risk management centers, aiming to prevent and manage risks

But she thought Brexiteers’ anger was misplaced.

“They’re directing that anger towards the EU and Brexit… whereas I think generally they’re dissatisfied and the EU and Brexit’s just seen as a scapegoat.”

Source: yahoo

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#boat#brexit#britain#diplomacy#eu#fire#fishermen#politics#traitors#UK#vessels
> More World

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

280,000 perpetual students deleted – 35,000 asked for an extension of studies

December 28, 2025

Haris Alexiou turned 75 on Thursday, choosing to mark the occasion away from public attention and in the company of close friends

December 28, 2025

One year of Donald Trump’s presidency: Developments during the first 365 days

December 28, 2025

Farmers’ road blockades: Positions on dialogue with the government and opposing stances on the issue

December 28, 2025

The shadow fleet in the crosshairs: The strike on a Russian tanker in the Mediterranean and the new risks to navigation

December 28, 2025

Weather: gusty winds up to 9 Beaufort today, what the forecast models show for New Year’s Eve

December 28, 2025

2026 is a milestone year for the Greek periphery: The balanced development of the region is a goal for the government

December 28, 2025

4.5 billion euro Christmas turnover in 2025: food, drinks, electronics, and clothing have the largest market share

December 28, 2025
All News

> World

One year of Donald Trump’s presidency: Developments during the first 365 days

How the US president governs, one year after taking power again - Tough crackdown where it can show results and concentration of power in the Oval Office

December 28, 2025

Glasgow hospital launches investigation after wrong body cremated

December 27, 2025

Vehicle collision on Japan’s Kanetsu expressway leaves one dead, 26 injured

December 27, 2025

US call for restraint amid tensions between Saudi Arabia and the UAE in Yemen

December 27, 2025

Joe and Jill Biden became great-grandparents: The first photos of their newborn great-grandson

December 27, 2025
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2025 Πρώτο Θέμα