East Bay Times

U.K. says time running out for solution in Brexit trade talks

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LONDON >> The British government tried Saturday to speed up the pace of talks to resolve post-Brexit trade troubles with the European Union, saying the two sides remain far apart and time is running out to bridge the gap.

U.K. and EU negotiator­s have met in Brussels over the past week to try to resolve major difference­s that have erupted over trade rules for Northern Ireland. The talks move to London on Tuesday, and Britain says “substantia­l gaps on the fundamenta­l issues remain.”

The U.K. government said talks so far had been “constructi­ve” but added that “we need to see real progress soon rather than get stuck in a process of endless negotiatio­n because the issues on the ground in Northern Ireland haven’t gone away.”

Northern Ireland, which is part of the U.K. and shares a border with EU member Ireland, remains inside the EU’s tariff-free single market for goods, even though the U.K. left the 27-nation bloc at the end of 2020.

That special status ensures there is an open border on the island of Ireland — a key pillar of Northern Ireland’s peace process since the 1998 Good Friday accord. But it means a new customs border in the Irish Sea for goods entering Northern Ireland from the rest of the U.K., even though they are part of the same country.

That has brought red tape for businesses, and caused problems with some goods reaching Northern Ireland. EU rules on chilled meats led to a brief sausage shortage, and now Britain claims that Christmas crackers — festive noisemaker­s that are a holiday party staple — are being prevented from reaching Northern Ireland.

The new arrangemen­ts also have angered Northern Ireland’s British Unionists, who say the checks undermine Northern Ireland’s place in the U.K. and destabiliz­e the delicate political balance on which peace rests.

The EU accuses Britain of trying to renegotiat­e a legally binding agreement that it signed less than a year ago; some officials say it shows the U.K. government can’t be trusted.

The bloc has, however, agreed to make changes to the deal, offering to reduce checks on food, plants and animals entering Northern Ireland by as much as 80% and to cut paperwork for transport companies in half.

Britain has welcomed those proposals but also is demanding that the EU’s top court be stripped of its role resolving any disputes over the agreement and replaced with independen­t arbitratio­n — an idea the bloc flatly rejects.

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