Belfast Telegraph

Brexit, the border and a bruising day of brinkmansh­ip

Row as Robinson tells Dublin: wind your neck in MPs say frictionle­ss frontier looks impossible Republic’s officials accuse UK of smears

- BY OUR POLITICAL STAFF

A WAR of words over the Irish border saw relations between leaders in London, Dublin and Belfast plummet last night as crunch Brexit talks loom.

Former DUP leader Peter Robinson told Dublin to “wind its neck in” on the border issue, and his party threatened to collapse the Tory government over a plan that would see Northern Ireland continue to operate EU customs rules after Brexit.

Meanwhile, Westminste­r’s Brexit committee warned that the return of border checkpoint­s seems “inevitable”, and Dublin officials accused London of a smear campaign against Taoiseach Leo Varadkar.

A RETURN of border checkpoint­s between Northern Ireland and the Republic appears inevitable after Britain leaves the EU, MPs have warned.

The Commons’ Brexit Committee said it appeared impossible to reconcile the Government’s decision to pull out of the single market and the customs union with its declared intention to maintain a “frictionle­ss” border.

It said the Government’s proposals for dealing with the issue, including using technology to create a “light touch” border, were “untested and to some extent speculativ­e”.

“We do not currently see how it will be possible to reconcile there being no border with the Government’s policy of leaving the single market and the customs union, which will inevitably make the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland the EU’s customs border with the UK,” the committee said.

But the report split the committee, with four of the eight Conservati­ves present, as well as the lone Democratic Unionist, Sammy Wilson, voting to reject it.

The findings echo the concerns of the Irish government, which has demanded a written guarantee from the UK that there will be no return to the “hard border” of the past as a result of Brexit.

Premier Leo Varadkar has warned that without such an assurance, EU leaders will not give the green light for the second phase of the Brexit negotiatio­ns, including talks on a free trade deal, to begin at their summit on December 14 and 15.

In its report, the committee urged the Government to begin work on ensuring the flow of goods in and out of the UK continued as freely as possible, regardless of whether there was a deal, including installing electronic customs checks and the constructi­on of a lorry park at the Port of Dover.

But it added: “Such measures would not deal with all the risks of serious delays in Dover and would have to be reciprocat­ed across the Channel in order to be effective.” The report also called on ministers to publish a white paper explaining how its proposed two-year transition period after the UK leaves the EU in March 2019 would work in practice.

It said any agreement made between the UK and the EU on future citizens’ rights should be “ring-fenced” to ensure the status of EU nationals living in the UK and British nationals in the EU was guaranteed, regardless of whether there was a wider deal.

One of the four Tory Brexiteers who voted against the report, Craig Mackinlay, rejected the suggestion that leaving the single market and the customs union would mean bringing back a “physical border infrastruc­ture” between Northern Ireland and the Republic.

“Of course, there has long been a VAT and currency border. Goods and services entailing cross-border transactio­ns have paperwork and electronic filing to efficientl­y and effectivel­y handle the different tax regimes,” he said.

“If we end up with the World Trade Organisati­on model, for instance, I see no reason why it is not possible to add a customs tariff, if necessary under a ‘no deal’ scenario.”

 ??  ?? Key figures in the debate: Prime Minister Theresa May, former First MInister of Northern Ireland Peter Robinson, newly-appointed Tanaiste Simon Coveney and Taoiseach Leo Varadkar
Key figures in the debate: Prime Minister Theresa May, former First MInister of Northern Ireland Peter Robinson, newly-appointed Tanaiste Simon Coveney and Taoiseach Leo Varadkar
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 ??  ?? Traffic queues: how the border with the Republic looked 40 years ago
Traffic queues: how the border with the Republic looked 40 years ago

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