The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Plan to rip up Northern Ireland Protocol sparks EU pledge to ‘retaliate’

- AMY GIBBONS AND DAVID HUGHES

The EU has threatened to retaliate with “all measures at its disposal” if the UK proceeds with controvers­ial plans to rip up parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol.

The foreign secretary has set out her intention to bring forward legislatio­n within weeks overwritin­g parts of the post-Brexit deal, freeing goods destined to stay within the UK from EU-level checks.

Liz Truss told the Commons the move was needed to reduce “unnecessar­y bureaucrac­y” and to protect the Good Friday Agreement, arguing that the EU’s proposals “would go backward from the situation we have today”.

She said the bill would take measures to protect the EU single market by implementi­ng “robust penalties” for those who “seek to abuse the new system”.

But European Commission Vice-President Maros Sefcovic criticised her plan and warned that Brussels could retaliate.

Should the UK proceed with the bill, the EU will respond with “all measures at its disposal”, he said.

This is likely to aggravate fears the move could spark a trade war with the bloc.

The legislatio­n will propose separate “green” and “red” lanes for goods travelling between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, drawing a line between those destined to stay within the UK and those heading to the Republic of Ireland and beyond.

There will be no crossover between the channels, it is understood, with goods filtering through one or the other, depending on their intended destinatio­n.

This will override the current arrangemen­ts, whereby Northern Ireland is effectivel­y kept in the EU’s single market for goods, with a hard border down the Irish Sea.

The row over the treaty has created an impasse in efforts to form a devolved government administra­tion in Belfast, with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) refusing to join an executive unless its concerns over the situation are addressed.

DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson said yesterday’s move was “welcome if overdue”, and a “significan­t” step towards getting power-sharing in Northern Ireland back up and running.

He told the Commons his party will take a “graduated and cautious approach” as the legislatio­n progresses.

But Ireland’s Foreign Affairs Minister Simon Coveney said the unilateral action from the UK was “damaging to trust”.

“At a time when people in Northern Ireland have chosen their elected representa­tives and want to get the executive back up and running, the path chosen by the British Government is of great concern,” he said.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson insisted problems with the protocol must be addressed.

On a visit to Paddington station, west London, he said: “What that actually involves is getting rid of some relatively minor barriers to trade.

“I think there are good, common-sense, pragmatic solutions. We need to work with our EU friends to achieve that.”

The protocol was negotiated by Mr Johnson as part of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement.

Asked how he could justify breaking a treaty he signed, the prime minister said “the higher duty of the UK Government in internatio­nal law is to the Good Friday Agreement and the peace process”.

He added: “That is the thing we have to really look to.”

Northern Ireland’s 1998 Good Friday peace agreement contains provisions to protect and develop relations, both on a north-south basis on the island of Ireland and on an east-west basis between the island and Great Britain.

The UK claims the protocol has upset this “delicate balance” of unionist and nationalis­t aspiration­s by underminin­g the east-west dynamic.

The controvers­ial legislatio­n announced yesterday is due in the “coming weeks”.

 ?? ?? TRADE: Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has set out her plans to scrap parts of the post-Brexit deal on Northern Ireland.
TRADE: Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has set out her plans to scrap parts of the post-Brexit deal on Northern Ireland.

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