Posted
Update
What are said Emmanuel Macron and Boris Johnson during their interview this Sunday, October 31 on the sidelines of the G20 in Rome, in particular on the burning issue of fishing licenses? Live on site, journalist Guillaume Daret provides some details in the 13 Hours newspaper.
The tête-à-tête between the French President and the British Prime Minister took place this Sunday, October 31 in Rome (Italy), during the G20 summit. “Emmanuel Macron and Boris Johnson share the same objective, that of a de-escalation of tensions on fishing in the coming days, this is what the Elysee says at the end of this meeting, says journalist Guillaume Daret live from the Italian capital. This means that they will work on very concrete measures to find solutions, in particular to these famous fishing licenses. ”
The interview between the two leaders lasted about thirty minutes. “Emmanuel Macron asks that Boris Johnson respect his signature. Moreover, Paris believes that it is not a Franco-British problem but a problem between the United Kingdom and the European Union, because respect for the post-Brexit agreement is at stake “, continues the journalist from France Télévisions. A relative of Emmanuel Macron judge “that the Head of State has done all he can and that the ball is now in Boris Johnson’s court”, concludes Guillaume Daret.
Team of the week
-
Editor-in-chief
Thomas Horeau
-
Deputy editor-in-chief
Régis Poullain and Margaux Manière
-
Publishing manager
Anne-Laure Cailler and Paul mescus
-
Joker
–
The weekend team
-
Editor-in-chief
Virginie Fichet
-
Deputy editor-in-chief
Franck Genauzeau, Willy Gouville and Jean François Monier
-
Publishing manager
Jean-Louis Gaudin
-
Joker
–
see all the news
all the news in video
Receive most of our news with our newsletter
Newsletter subscription
France Télévisions uses your email address to send you newsletters.
articles On the same topic
seen from europe
Every day, Franceinfo selects content from European public audiovisual media, members of Eurovision. These contents are published in English or French.