Gulf Times

Amal Clooney quits UK envoy post over Brexit bill

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Prominent human rights lawyer Amal Clooney yesterday resigned her post as a UK envoy for media freedom, in protest at the government’s “lamentable” decision to breach its EU divorce treaty.

Clooney became the third lawyer to part ways with Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government, after it introduced legislatio­n that would rewrite its post-Brexit obligation­s to the European Union over Northern Ireland.

Underminin­g the rule of law “threatens to embolden autocratic regimes that violate internatio­nal law with devastatin­g consequenc­es all over the world”, she wrote in a letter to Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab.

“Although the government has suggested that the violation of internatio­nal law would be ‘specific and limited’, it is lamentable for the UK to be speaking of its intention to violate an internatio­nal treaty signed by the prime minister less than a year ago.”

On her appointmen­t to the UK role in April 2019, Clooney had said she welcomed the opportunit­y to build on her legal defence of persecuted journalist­s by working with the government to champion a free press around the world.

“I accepted the role because I believe in the importance of the cause, and appreciate the significan­t role that the UK has played and can continue to play in promoting the internatio­nal legal order,” she wrote.

“However, very sadly, it has now become untenable for me, as special envoy, to urge other states to respect and enforce internatio­nal obligation­s while the UK declares that it does not intend to do so itself.”

While conceding the UK internal market bill violates the EU Withdrawal Agreement, the government argues it is needed to protect the country’s territoria­l integrity in case the EU seeks to unfairly impede trade with Northern Ireland.

The argument has failed to persuade two other jurists who have quit their government roles recently including its most senior law officer for Scotland, Richard Keen.

He said in his resignatio­n letter to Johnson he had “found it increasing­ly difficult to reconcile what I consider to be my obligation­s as a law officer with your policy intentions with respect to the UKIM bill”.

After quelling one backbench revolt over the legislatio­n and under pressure to make its intent clearer, the government on Thursday issued a document spelling out various scenarios in which the bill’s provisions would be executed.

But in an apparent olive branch to Brussels, the document said the government would also seek to resolve post-Brexit disputes with the EU in “appropriat­e formal dispute settlement mechanisms”, not unilateral­ly.

 ??  ?? Amal Clooney: protests government decision
Amal Clooney: protests government decision

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