Gulf News

Irish leader warns May over Brexit

JOHNSON URGES BRITISH PM TO DITCH PROPOSED BORDER BACKSTOP IN EU TALKS

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Brexit hardliner Boris Johnson, a former British foreign minister, called on Prime Minister Theresa May yesterday to rebuff the European Union’s demand for a special “backstop” deal to avoid a hard border in Ireland after Brexit.

“The only way to put things back on the right track is to ditch the backstop and then to chuck Chequers,” Johnson wrote in an article for the Belfast News Letter, referring to a set of proposals formulated in July at May’s Chequers country retreat.

Johnson resigned over the Chequers plan, which envisages maintainin­g close ties with the EU on trade in goods after Brexit.

‘Annexation’

Meanwhile, the head of the Northern Irish party that props up British Prime Minister Theresa May’s government said yesterday she would prefer no Brexit deal to a bad deal, describing current plans as amounting to “the annexation of Northern Ireland” by the European Union.

British and European Union negotiator­s this month have accelerate­d the push for a Brexit deal but talks remain snagged on the issue of the border between Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK, and the Irish Republic, an EU member state.

In the absence of a comprehens­ive EU-UK trade partnershi­p after Brexit, the EU is seeking a “backstop” arrangemen­t whereby Northern Ireland would effectivel­y remain subject to the bloc’s regulation­s to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland.

But the DUP, whose support May needs to pass legislatio­n in the British parliament, vehemently opposes any proposals under which the province would be treated differentl­y to the rest of the UK.

“I fully appreciate the risks of a ‘no deal’ (Brexit) but the dangers of a bad deal are worse,” Foster wrote in an article in the Belfast Telegraph published yesterday.

“This backstop arrangemen­t would not be temporary. It would be the permanent annexation of Northern Ireland away from the rest of the United Kingdom and forever leave us subject to rules made in a place where we have no say,” she added.

Britain wants any ‘backstop’ arrangemen­t to be timelimite­d.

Hardline supporters of Brexit in May’s ruling Conservati­ve Party fear it could be used to keep the whole UK inside a customs union indefinite­ly with the EU.

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