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EU urges UK to accept Swiss-style deal to end ‘sausage war’ row

- Reuters Brussels

The EU urged London on Tuesday to consider a Swiss-style veterinary agreement with Brussels on agri-foods to end a post-Brexit “sausage war” row over certain goods moving between Britain and its province of Northern Ireland.

Tension has mounted over trade arrangemen­ts for Northern Ireland, particular­ly chilled meat, because the province’s open border with EU member Ireland is now part of Britain’s frontier with the EU’s single market. European Commission­er Maros Sefcovic, the EU executive’s chief interlocut­or with Britain since it completed its exit from the bloc last year, said the biggest challenge for Brussels was how to rebuild trust and realign its relationsh­ip with London.

“To build trust in each other requires first working together cooperativ­ely and refraining from surprises,” he said, referring to Britain’s unilateral extension of grace periods for some food imports to its province of Northern Ireland.

“In response, we were forced to launch an infringeme­nt procedure (legal action), and without satisfacto­ry steps by the UK to remedy these measures we will have no choice but to step up these legal proceeding­s,” he told a conference.

The EU is worried goods could flow unchecked from Northern Ireland into the bloc’s single market.

London says an important part of Brexit is not being bound to EU rules and has called on the EU to show more flexibilit­y in finding solutions to the standoff.

Britain has also accused the EU of an overly legalistic interpreta­tion of the Northern Ireland protocol, an agreement which governs trading arrangemen­ts following Brexit.

Sefcovic said legal steps over the protocol was not the EU’s preferred option and that an agreement last week to a three-month extension for free movement of chilled meats into the province signaled its willingnes­s to find pragmatic solutions.

He said a longer-term solution to avoid Sanitary and Phytosanit­ary (SPS) checks for agri-food products, ranging from live animals to fresh meat and plant products, could be along the lines of an agreement the EU has with Switzerlan­d.

That pact removes nearly all physical SPS checks, though not documentar­y checks, and achieves this through a dynamic regulatory mechanism that creates a Common Veterinary Area.

“This could be negotiated very quickly and would address many concerns,” Sefcovic said. “The UK continuing to apply EU SPS rules will do away with a vast majority of the checks in the Irish Sea and would not require checks elsewhere, say in Northern Ireland.”

He said he was aware of the British government’s concerns about such a solution, but added it was important “not to get too caught up” with concerns about alignment of rules and regulation­s between Britain and the EU.

 ?? AFP ?? Britain’s PM Boris Johnson during his visit to Royal Berkshire NHS Hospital in Reading.
AFP Britain’s PM Boris Johnson during his visit to Royal Berkshire NHS Hospital in Reading.

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