The Guardian (USA)

'Welcome news': relief as EU backtracks on NI Covid vaccine move

- Lisa O'Carroll Brexit correspond­ent

The EU has said it is “not triggering the safeguard clause” to block Covid vaccine exports from the bloc to Northern Ireland after widespread condemnati­on of the move.

The EU’s initial decision to trigger a Brexit deal clause to place controls on the export of vaccines sparked criticism on both sides of Irish border and led to frantic talks including a call between the UK and Ireland to avert a full-scale crisis.

On news that the move to trigger article 16 of the Northern Ireland protocol was not going ahead, the Irish taoiseach, Micheál Martin, tweeted that it was a “welcome decision by the

European commission” and “a positive developmen­t given the many challenges we face in tackling Covid-19”.

Ireland’s foreign minister, Simon Coveney, described the U-turn as “welcome news” but warned in a tweet: “Lessons should be learned; the protocol is not something to be tampered with lightly, it’s an essential, hard won compromise, protecting peace and trade for many.”

The European commission pres

ident, Ursula von der Leyen, said she had spoken to Martin to agree a “satisfacto­ry way” to impose export authorisat­ions for coronaviru­s vaccines. The move comes amid a deepening row over the allocation of the Oxford/AstraZenec­a vaccine after the company announced delays to its EU operations.

Spain’s foreign minister, Arancha González Laya, told BBC’s Newsnight the use of article 16 was an “accident” and “a mishap” that had been “repaired”.

Before the EU’s U-turn, a No 10 spokespers­on had said the UK was “urgently seeking an explanatio­n from the European commission” about the move. They added that Boris Johnson and Martin had held a “constructi­ve discussion” about the events.

“The UK has legally binding agreements with vaccine suppliers and it would not expect the EU, as a friend and ally, to do anything to disrupt the fulfilment of these contracts,” the spokespers­on said, adding that the UK has “reiterated the importance of preserving the benefits of the Belfast/Good Friday agreement”.

Article 16 was agreed in the original withdrawal agreement and gives both sides the power to unilateral­ly introduce checks on goods if not doing so could result in “serious economic, societal or environmen­tal difficulti­es”.

It is designed as a “last resort” but would have been used as an emergency brake on the UK government using Northern Ireland as a back door route to secure EU supplies of the Covid vaccine in the event of a blockade.

Irish government sources told reporters the initial decision was “completely unnecessar­y” and had “explosive political implicatio­ns”.

Arlene Foster, Stormont’s first minister, had branded the decision to use article 16 an “incredible act of hostility”. She added it was a “despicable” move that would create the hard border on the island of Ireland that the Northern Ireland protocol was designed to prevent.

The European commission said the move was “justified as a safeguard measure pursuant to article 16 of that protocol in order to avert serious societal difficulti­es due to a lack of supply threatenin­g to disturb the orderly implementa­tion of the vaccinatio­n campaigns in the member states”.

It is believed the decision was made without consultati­on with either the

UK or Ireland government.

Before the U-turn, a senior EU diplomatic source said: “This is an extraordin­ary misjudgeme­nt and shows a complete misunderst­anding of the protocol and article 16, which is meant to be used as a last resort. There was no discussion about this and came like a shot out of the blue.”

They warned that tensions over the Northern Ireland protocol had risen over the past fortnight with traders unhappy with the extent of checks on goods traded across the Irish Sea and controvers­y over the future movement of troops between Great Britain and NI.

“Irrespecti­ve of what Brexit we got, we knew there were going to be unforeseen consequenc­es and these issues go to the very core of the troubles, sensitivit­ies over identity and sovereignt­y and instead of the EU taking every effort to tackle the vaccine issue with the British government it has decided to use the Northern Ireland protocol.

“To retaliate in this way using the Northern Ireland protocol as a football is very dangerous,” they said.

This is an extraordin­ary misjudgeme­nt … There was no discussion about this and came like a shot out of the blue

Senior EU source

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