The Asian Age

Ireland PM says will not threaten to veto talks WARY NATION

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Dublin, Nov. 12: Ireland will not threaten to use a veto on Brexit talks “at this stage” over the lack of progress on the Irish border as Dublin is in a very strong position with all EU member states behind it, Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said on Sunday.

Brussels wants three issues broadly solved before it decides in December whether talks can move on to a second phase about trade: the exit bill, safeguardi­ng expatriate rights and the border between Ireland and Northern Ireland, which will be the UK’s only land frontier with the EU after its departure.

After the latest round of negotiatio­ns this week, Ireland said there was still a way to go between the two teams on the border before moving on to trade, raising the possibilit­y that Dublin could block the sides advancing if it is not satisfied.

“The question is very much a hypothetic­al one, we don’t know if Ireland will be the only outstandin­g issue in December. What I’m not going to do at this stage, I’m not going to make ultimatums or threaten to use a veto,” Varadkar told Irish national broadcaste­r RTE.

“The one thing we’ve managed to do in the 18 months since the (Brexit) referendum is to totally align ourselves with all 27 member states. From Berlin to Bucharest, they’re all behind us, and that puts us in a very strong position.”

The Irish government has called on Britain to do more than simply promise that a “hard” border will not return between it and Northern Ireland, which until a 1998 peace deal was separated by military checkpoint­s due to 30 years of sectarian violence in the British province.

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