Gulf Times

EU ‘will not accept UK’s N Ireland Brexit red line’

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The European Union will not accept London’s demands for an alternativ­e arbitrator to settle post-Brexit trade disputes involving Northern Ireland, Dublin said yesterday after the EU offered other concession­s.

Brussels put forward a raft of proposals on Wednesday, including reduced customs checks and paperwork on British products intended for Northern Ireland, in a bid to solve problems caused by the Brexit deal signed last year.

But there was no movement on what Britain says is one of its red lines: the role of the EU’s European Court of Justice (ECJ) as arbiter in any post-Brexit disputes involving the province.

“There should not be a role for the ECJ in any part of the UK, including Northern Ireland,” British

Health Secretary Sajid Javid told Sky News yesterday, calling it “one of the most important issues”.

But when asked by Britain’s Times Radio if the EU would consider an alternativ­e arbitratio­n system, Ireland’s European Affairs Minister Thomas Byrne said: “No, I don’t think so.

“It is not a question of the European Court of Justice having any sovereignt­y over Britain or any part of Britain.

“It is simply the fact that the European Court of Justice arbitrates on the single market of the European Union, in which Northern Ireland has been allowed to remain,” he added.

A team of EU negotiator­s on Wednesday delivered the plans to London, a day after the UK’s Brexit minister David Frost said the current deal — known as the Northern Ireland Protocol — should be ripped up.

“We are looking forward to engaging earnestly and intensivel­y with the UK government, in the interest of all communitie­s in Northern Ireland,” said European Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic.

Sections of the pro-UK unionist community in Northern Ireland have rioted over the implementa­tion of the protocol, which they say drives a wedge between the province and the rest of the UK.

They also fear it strengthen­s the push by republican­s for a united Ireland following the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement.

Jeffrey Donaldson, head of Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, said he had held a “useful and honest discussion” with Sefcovic yesterday. “I welcomed the change of heart in Brussels with the decision to renegotiat­e,” Donaldson said in a statement. “I also explained why the proposals fall short of what is needed. We need a sustainabl­e solution which removes the Irish Sea border and restores our place within the United Kingdom.”

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