CALL FOR NORTH TO BE A SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE
Martin plea to tackle poverty & limit Brexit damage
THE North and the border counties should be designated as a “special economic zone” to challenge poverty and help limit the damage of Brexit, Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin has said.
The Cork South Central TD warned that if the region is to tackle poor wages and deprivation it needs a new financial model.
Speaking at the British-irish Association in Cambridge, Mr Martin said: “Northern Ireland will not break out of a cycle of low incomes and poverty – in fact things will get worse – unless there is a move to address its structural problems.
“I believe the answer is the creation of a Special Economic Zone [SEZ] in the North and at least the border counties in the South.
“This can be done while fully respecting the constitutional rights protected in the Good Friday Agreement and incorporated into both UK and Irish law.”
Mr Martin explained an SEZ could be recognised by the EU as being distinct from the rest of the UK in terms of Single Market and Customs Union access.
He added that the terms of the Good Friday Agreement set Northern Ireland in an EU context.
He said: “It should not be hard to design a mechanism for certifying businesses conform with EU standards relevant to market access.
“UK sovereignty would remain intact – in fact it is the UK government’s official policy to support such zones in countries with structural development issues in defined regions. There is a solution available to the economic threat to Northern Ireland from a Brexit vote passed solely on an English majority.
“It is a solution which has the potential to prioritise and kick-start long-delayed and urgently needed development in the most disadvantaged region of these islands.”
Mr Martin also warned that the ongoing political deadlock at Stormont was causing “enormous concern”.
He said: “It is deepening political disengagement. It is leaving Northern Ireland voiceless during Brexit negotiations.
“We have to understand that we have to do things differently if we are to break out of the ongoing cycle of crises which we have been caught in.
“We have to do things differently if we are to prevent Brexit causing deep destruction to relations and progress in these islands.”
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Things will get worse unless there is a move to address problems MICHEAL MARTIN CAMBRIDGE