The Day

‘No-deal’ Brexit documents warn of food, drug shortages

- By RAPHAEL SATTER

London — Secret British government documents have warned of serious disruption­s across the country in the event that the U.K. leaves the European Union without a trade deal on Oct. 31, according to a report.

The Sunday Times newspaper published what it said was what the British government expects in the case of a sudden, “no-deal” Brexit. Among the most serious: “significan­t” disruption­s to the supply of drugs and medicine, a decrease in the availabili­ty of fresh food and even potential fresh water shortages due to possible interrupti­ons of imported water treatment chemicals.

Although the grim scenarios reportedly outlined in the government documents have long been floated by academics and economists, they’ve been repeatedly dismissed as scaremonge­ring by Brexit proponents.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said he is ready to leave the EU regardless of whether he is able to renegotiat­e the Brexit deal struck with Brussels by his predecesso­r, Theresa May.

His own officials, however, have warned that with a no-deal Brexit, the sharing of law enforcemen­t data and the health of Britain’s crucial financial services industry could be in jeopardy after Oct. 31.

The documents published by the Times also quote officials as warning that up to 85 percent of all trucks wouldn’t be ready for French customs at the critical English Channel crossing that day, causing lines that could stretch out for days. Some 75 percent of all drugs coming into Britain arrive via that crossing, the memos warned, “making them particular­ly vulnerable to severe delays.”

The officials foresee “critical elements” of the food supply chain being affected that would “reduce availabili­ty and choice and increase the price, which will affect vulnerable groups.”

Britain’s Cabinet Office didn’t return a message seeking comment on the documents, but Michael Gove, the British minister in charge of no-deal preparatio­ns, insisted that the files represente­d a “worst case scenario.”

Very “significan­t steps have been taken in the last 3 weeks to accelerate Brexit planning,” he said in a message posted to Twitter.

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