The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Plans to mix up Northern Ireland deal

- AMY GIBBONS

The foreign secretary has set out her intention to bring forward legislatio­n within weeks overwritin­g parts of the post-Brexit deal on Northern Ireland.

The Bill will propose separate “green” and “red” lanes for goods travelling between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, with those destined to stay within the UK freed from EU-level checks.

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

The legislatio­n is due in the “coming weeks”, before the summer recess.

Liz Truss told the Commons yesterday that the Bill will put in place the necessary measures to “lessen the burden on eastwest trade and to ensure the people of Northern Ireland are able to access the same benefits as the people of Great Britain”.

“The Bill will ensure that goods moving and staying within the UK are freed of unnecessar­y bureaucrac­y through our new green channel,” she said.

“This respects Northern Ireland’s place in the UK, in its customs territory, and protects the UK internal market.

“At the same time it ensures that goods destined for the EU undergo the full checks and controls applied under EU law.”

Ms Truss went on to say the Bill will remove regulatory barriers to goods made to UK standards being sold in Northern Ireland, with businesses able to choose between meeting UK or EU standards in a new “dual regulatory regime”.

The legislatio­n will also provide the government with the ability to decide on tax and spend policies across the whole of the UK, she said.

She added: “It will address issues related to governance, bringing the protocol in line with internatio­nal norms.

“At the same time it will take new measures to protect the EU single market by implementi­ng robust penalties for those who seek to abuse the new system.”

It is understood that the UK would pull the Bill in the event of all of its aims and objectives being met by the EU.

The option of invoking Article 16 will remain on the table.

More details are expected to be set out in the coming weeks.

 ?? ?? CHANGES: Liz Truss, middle, expects the legislatio­n to go through in the ‘coming weeks’.
CHANGES: Liz Truss, middle, expects the legislatio­n to go through in the ‘coming weeks’.

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