The Scotsman

UK and EU behaving ‘recklessly’

● MPS say without change of direction lives could be put at risk ● Report flags up ‘disappoint­ingly rigid’ approach by Brussels

- By DAVID HUGHES newsdeskts_@scotsman.com

The lives of British and European citizens could be put at risk unless the UK and EU change course to secure a Brexit deal, MPS have warned.

Theresa May’s decision to rule out European Court of Justice (ECJ) jurisdicti­on and the “disappoint­ingly rigid” approach to negotiatio­ns by Brussels contribute­d to a risk of the UK being locked out of EU databases, losing access to the European Arrest Warrant (EAW) and having a reduced influence in Europol.

Both sides risked “recklessly” underminin­g the safety of people across the EU as a result, the Commons home affairs committee warned.

In a strongly worded report today the MPS said: n Losing access to the secondgene­ration Schengen Informatio­n System (SIS II) database would be “calamitous”. n Being forced to rely on the 1957 Convention on Extraditio­n instead of the EAW would be a “catastroph­ic outcome”. n A no-deal Brexit would be “the most unthinkabl­e of outcomes”. n Without contingenc­y plans “the safety and security of UK and EU citizens will be put at serious and unnecessar­y risk”.

The Prime Minister used the June European Council meeting

YVETTE COOPER to warn her fellow leaders that the safety of citizens would be at risk unless there was a security deal, but the Commons committee said Mrs May should also alter her own red lines.

The MPS said: “We express serious concerns about the lack of progress in the negotiatio­ns to date; the impact on security co-operation of the government’s ‘red lines’, including the jurisdicti­on of the ECJ; the disappoint­ingly rigid EU negotiatin­g position; and the very real prospect of the UK losing access to SIS II, which is vital to our law enforcemen­t and border security capabiliti­es.

“We believe that both the EU and the UK government need to show more flexibilit­y, and give greater priority to getting an early agreement that continues existing policing and security co-operation; otherwise, they will recklessly undermine security in both the UK and the EU, and will let the public down badly.” tythe SIS II system enables law enforcemen­t authoritie­s to share “real time” alerts on missing and wanted individual­s and stolen property.

The hard-hitting report said: “Without UK access to SIS II, individual­s who pose a genuine threat will be able to enter the UK or the EU without important intelligen­ce being flagged to border officials.

“Losing access to it would be a calamitous outcome for the UK, which would pose a severe threat to the government’s ability to prevent serious crime and secure the border effectivel­y.”

They said that given the extent of ECJ involvemen­t in any UK-EU data-sharing arrangemen­t it was “unwise” to make it a red line issue in the negotiatio­ns.

The EU’S approach “appears to be driven more by political considerat­ions than by operationa­l needs”, they said.

The committee’s Labour chairwoman Yvette Cooper said: “Both sides are putting political red lines ahead of public safety and national security - that is completely irresponsi­ble.

“We have a shared interest in continued close policing co-operation, which people in Britain and across the EU would want and expect to continue after Brexit.

“But at the moment, political posturing on both sides is putting that at risk.”

She warned that a no deal scenario would “stop the police sharing crucial informatio­n on dangerous internatio­nal criminals, stop border officials getting urgent informatio­n on criminals trying to enter the country, undermine investigat­ions into traffickin­g, terrorism, organised crime and slavery, jeopardise trials and justice for victims, and let criminals go free”.

A separate report yesterday warned food safety controls could be suspended to prevent perishable goods getting delayed at UK borders if no Brexit deal is secured.

Academics say they have been informed by a government adviser of the plans being developed should delays emerge.

EU countries might then respond by blocking exports from the UK due to it adopting a “cavalier” approach to safety standards, the report adds.

But the government denied this was the case, saying it will not suspend food safety controls regardless of a no-deal scenario.

Theresa May holds a cabinet meeting in Gateshead yesterday

“Both sides are putting political red lines ahead of public safety and national security - that is completely irresponsi­ble”

Tories and SNP ‘sawing at legs of the Union’ as Supreme Court hears Brexit case

Nationalis­t government­s in Edinburgh and London are “sawing away at the legs that support the Union”, Labour has claimed ahead of the start of a Supreme Court case pitting the UK and Scottish Government against one other over Brexit.

Shadow Scotland secretary Lesley Laird said Conservati­ves and the SNP both posed “clear threats” to the unity of the UK, while Labour MP Ian Murray said the “chaos” of Brexit was underminin­g the Union.

Judges at the Supreme Court in London will hear oral arguments from the two government­s’ top legal officers on the question of whether a

Paris Gourtsoyan­nis

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