Imperial Valley Press

EU optimistic about the Brexit border compromise

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BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union Brexit envoy Michel Barnier said Tuesday that his team is studying ways to carry out checks on goods moving into Northern Ireland in an effort to overcome a major obstacle in the negotiatio­ns, on the eve of a summit of EU leaders.

Brussels and London are struggling to come up with a solution that would keep the border open between EU member Ireland and the U.K.’s Northern Ireland, just six months before Britain leaves the bloc.

After talks with EU ministers in Brussels, Barnier told reporters that it’s important to “de-dramatize” the whole border issue.

“Work on the EU side is ongoing. We are clarifying which goods arriving in Northern Ireland from the rest of the U.K. would need to be checked, and where, when and by whom these checks could be performed,” he said, adding that “most checks can take place away from the border, at a company premises or in the markets.”

The goods would then move freely from Northern Ireland into Ireland and the EU.

Addressing concerns that a hard border might be created, Barnier said “what we are talking about is not a border, neither on land or at sea. No. It is a set of technical controls and checks, a lot of which, most, can be put in place and carried out in places other than physically in Northern Ireland.”

Despite suggestion­s of a compromise on a key issue, European Council President Donald Tusk warned earlier Tuesday that both sides could yet fail to reach an agreement.

“Unfortunat­ely, a no deal scenario is still quite possible. But if we all act responsibl­y, we can avoid a catastroph­e,” Tusk wrote in a letter, inviting the 28 EU leaders to talks in Salzburg, Austria, starting Wednesday evening. Barnier says an EU summit in October “will be the moment of truth” in Brexit talks.

In Tokyo, British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt insisted that the U.K. will flourish with or without a deal.

A “no-deal” Brexit is possible, Hunt said in an interview, “but I don’t think it’s in anyone’s interest for that to happen. So that’s why we are cautiously optimistic that we will get a deal. But there’s a lot of work to do to get there.”

British Prime Minister Theresa May needs to win over both the EU and critics of her Brexit proposal within her own Conservati­ve Party. Britain is due to leave the EU on March 29, but both sides are eager to seal a deal within weeks to leave parliament­s time to ratify it.

 ?? AP Photo/VIrgInIA MAyo ?? EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier (right) speaks with Poland’s European Affairs Minister Konrad Szymansk (left) during a General Affairs Article 50 Council at the Europa building in Brussels, on Tuesday.
AP Photo/VIrgInIA MAyo EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier (right) speaks with Poland’s European Affairs Minister Konrad Szymansk (left) during a General Affairs Article 50 Council at the Europa building in Brussels, on Tuesday.

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