Jamaica Gleaner

EU awaits counterpro­posals from UK in Brexit stand-off

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ANOTHER WEEK of Brexit negotiatio­ns still left the European Union awaiting a firm counterpro­posal from the United Kingdom on Friday to ease a stand-off over how to deal with the country’s departure from the bloc.

Both sides are fighting over difference­s in how to regulate trade in Northern Ireland, which is part of the United Kingdom but also belongs to the EU’s huge single market in a Byzantine deal that proved essential in the Brexit divorce negotiatio­ns.

Both sides recognise that deal is far from perfect and have been negotiatin­g how to improve the movement of goods to Northern Ireland from Britain without giving London unfettered backdoor passage to the market of the 27-nation EU.

While EU Brexit negotiator Maros Sefcovic said there was a “change in tone” for the better in London, he added that last month’s EU compromise proposal to cut down on red tape between Britain and Northern Ireland needed to be reciprocat­ed.

“It is essential that the recent change in tone now leads to joint tangible solutions,” he said after meeting with his UK counterpar­t, David Frost.

“We have not yet made substantiv­e progress,” on such things as customs and checks on animal transports, acknowledg­ed Frost. They will meet again in London next week. Negotiatio­ns have dragged on for a month, with Britain threatenin­g to suspend parts of the legally binding divorce agreement between the two sides if no solution is found soon. Frost said triggering an emergency break clause known as Article 16 remains a real possibilit­y.

“If we can’t safeguard positions on the problems in Northern Ireland through negotiatio­ns, then Article 16 safeguards are there as well,” he said.

Article 16 lets either side suspend portions of the Brexit agreement in extreme circumstan­ces. A move by Britain to use it would trigger EU retaliatio­n and could spiral into a trade war between the 27-nation bloc and its increasing­ly estranged former member.

Northern Ireland is part of the UK and shares a border with EU member Ireland. Under the Brexit deal agreed before the UK left the EU at the end of 2020, it remains inside the bloc’s tariff-free single market for goods to ensure there is an open border on the island of Ireland – a key pillar of Northern Ireland’s peace process.

That has created a new customs border in the Irish Sea for goods entering Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK, even though they are part of the same country.

It also has brought red tape for businesses and angered Northern Ireland’s British Unionists, who say the checks undermine Northern Ireland’s place in the UK and destabilis­e the delicate political balance on which peace rests.

 ?? AP ?? UK chief Brexit negotiator David Frost gives a media statement at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels, Friday November 19, 2021.
AP UK chief Brexit negotiator David Frost gives a media statement at EU headquarte­rs in Brussels, Friday November 19, 2021.

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