UK sets up EU battle with Northern Ireland deal changes

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The UK government will Monday introduce legislation to unilaterally rip up post-Brexit trading rules for Northern Ireland, despite the potential for a trade war with the EU.

London says it still prefers a negotiated outcome with the EU to reform the ‘Northern Ireland Protocol’, whose provisions have become anathema to pro-UK unionists in the divided territory.

But absent a deal through dialogue, the bill would take effect to override Britain's EU withdrawal treaty – although the government insists it is not breaking international law.

Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis said Sunday that the protocol was disrupting trade and had crippled the territory's power-sharing government, due to unionist objections.

‘So it's right that we repair that,’ he said, adding that the need to protect a 1998 peace agreement in Northern Ireland had ‘primacy’ over the protocol.

Lewis rejected threats from some in the EU that unilateral changes could trigger the suspension of the withdrawal treaty's wider trade agreement, leading to sanctions and tariffs against Britain.

The UK can ill-afford a trade war, at a time when its people are grappling with the worst inflationary crisis in a generation.

‘I think that kind of language is really unhelpful,’ the minister said on Times Radio, pointing to the need for Britain and the EU to work together against Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

However, on the EU side, patience with Prime Minister Boris Johnson's tactics is wearing thin, according to Ireland's government.

Irish nationalist party Sinn Fein on Sunday accused Johnson of sacrificing stability in Northern Ireland for his own survival, after he narrowly won a Conservative confidence vote last week.

‘It's dishonourable stuff, by any measure extraordinary stuff,’ Sinn Fein's all-Ireland president Mary Lou McDonald said on Sky.

‘Brandon Lewis is talking through his hat, and not for the first time,’ she added, accusing the government of ‘undermining, attacking and damaging the (1998) Good Friday Agreement’.

In a historic first, Sinn Fein emerged as the biggest party in Northern Ireland elections last month.

But the Democratic Unionist Party argues that the protocol is jeopardising Northern Ireland's status in the UK and is boycotting the local government, leaving it in limbo under the 1998 deal. 

The protocol requires checks on goods arriving from England, Scotland and Wales, to prevent them from entering the EU's single market via the Republic of Ireland.

The UK bill is expected to scrap most of the checks, creating a ‘green channel’ for British traders to send goods to Northern Ireland without making any customs declaration to the EU.

The EU would have access to more real-time UK data on the flow of goods, and only businesses intending to trade into the single market via Ireland would be required to make declarations.

The EU would need to trust the UK to monitor the flow, and Britain has vowed ‘robust penalties’ for any companies seeking to abuse the new system. 

Since the confidence vote, Johnson has reportedly been under pressure from pro-Brexit Tory hardliners to toughen the bill and remove oversight of the protocol by the European Court of Justice.

Lewis said there was ‘no logic’ to having only one side's judges involved in a bilateral trade arrangement, but ECJ invigilation is a red line for the EU, to protect its single market.

Britain's opposition Labour party said the government was in no position to claim its handling of the Brexit dispute was lawful.

‘This government seems to be developing a record for lawbreaking,’ Labour's shadow finance minister Rachel Reeves said, after Johnson was fined over one of many Downing Street lockdown parties.

‘We helped bring in the Good Friday Agreement, we are deeply, passionately committed to it,’ she added.

source: AFP

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