Huddersfield Daily Examiner

New EU proposals over NI Protocol

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THE Queen has held her first major event at Buckingham Palace since the pandemic began, launching her Commonweal­th Games 2022 baton on a global relay.

Paralympic gold medallist Kadeena Cox was given the honour of taking the baton on the first leg of its 90,000-mile journey which will lead to the opening ceremony in the host city Birmingham.

The Queen handed the symbol for the “friendly games” to four-time Paralympic champion Cox who won two gold medals at Rio 2016 and two at Tokyo 2020 after a message to the athletes and the Commonweal­th was inserted into the baton.

THE EU is preparing to table new proposals on the Northern Ireland Protocol by the “middle of next week”, Maros Sefcovic has said.

The European Commission vice-president said he hopes to brief the UK Government on the “very far-reaching” proposals within the next fortnight, before intensive discussion­s throughout the rest October and November.

The proposals will focus on animal checks (SPS), customs, medicine supplies and providing a voice for Northern Irish representa­tives in the EU.

Mr Sefcovic told a virtual meeting in Dublin: “What we are discussing right now where we would like to put the final touches hopefully by the by the middle of next week.

“It’s a very simple proposal but from our perspectiv­e these would be really, I would say, very far-reaching proposals.

“I sincerely hope that it will be seen as such by our UK counterpar­ts and they engage constructi­vely in our discussion, because I think we have to move from the tough political rhetoric, from the threats we hear all the time, down to the business that actually solves the problems.”

He added: “I think it is the best interest of both of us that we will try to find a reasonable

Cox, who took the baton on a brief journey around the nearby Queen Victoria Memorial before handing it to another competitor, said about the experience: “It’s really special.

“I fall into this category where I’m very diverse - I’m a female, disabled, black athlete for me I think that’s what the Commonweal­th represents and solution before the end of the year, early next year.”

Mr Sefcovic said there was a “political risk” attached to the proposals, if the UK Government were to accept them and then proceed with its threats to take what is seen to be the “nuclear option” of triggering Article 16 of the protocol.

This option was mooted by Brexit negotiator Lord David Frost at the Conservati­ve party conference this week.

Such a move would effectivel­y tear up parts of the deal to avoid a hard border with Ireland, which was negotiated with the EU last December.

The vice president said this question had been raised by member states and in the European Parliament. especially being in Birmingham which is such a diverse place.”

A strand of platinum has been incorporat­ed into the baton in recognitio­n of the Queen’s 70-year reign, which will be celebrated next year, and it is packed with hi-tech gadgets for its journey to all 72 nations and territorie­s of the Commonweal­th over 294 days.

“These threats are definitely not helping,” he told the Irish Institute of European Affairs (IIEA).

“We want simply to make sure that from our side, we will demonstrat­e to the people of Northern Ireland, to the people of Ireland that we in the European Commission are willing to do everything possible within the framework which is agreed and ratified, to solve the practical issues on the table.

“We want Northern Ireland to benefit from the access to the biggest trading block in the world. We want to make sure that there will be no hard border.”

He added: “The protocol is not the problem. On the contrary, it is the only solution we have.

“Failing to apply it will not make problems disappear, but simply take away the tools to solve them.”

Mr Sefcovic said the EU’s proposals would not be “take it or leave it”.

But he added: “We will put it on the table and if for some other reasons – I’m not going to speculate what they might be – this is rejected, then indeed we have a problem.

“I hope that we will avoid it, because we are approachin­g this from the beginning in a good place.”

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Maros Sefcovic

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