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UK publishes plan to override parts of Brexit deal

Tue, 14 Jun 2022   |  Reading Time: 2 minutes

London, Jun 13 (PTI) The UK government introduced legislation in Parliament on Monday that would override parts of the Brexit agreement struck with the European Union (EU) when Britain left the common economic zone.

While the British government insists the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill is aimed at fixing parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol, the EU is opposed to the move because it warns it goes back on agreed terms signed by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson over two years ago.

The UK government denies any potential breach of international law, arguing that the changes will mean the United Kingdom stays together.

“This Bill will uphold the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement and support political stability in Northern Ireland,” said UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, as the first reading of the Bill took place in the House of Commons.

“It will end the untenable situation where people in Northern Ireland are treated differently to the rest of the United Kingdom, protect the supremacy of our courts and our territorial integrity. This is a reasonable, practical solution to the problems facing Northern Ireland,” she said.

The minister insisted that the move will safeguard the EU Single Market and ensure there is no hard border on the island of Ireland.

“We are ready to deliver this through talks with the EU. But we can only make progress through negotiations if the EU are willing to change the Protocol itself – at the moment they aren’t.

“In the meantime, the serious situation in Northern Ireland means we cannot afford to allow the situation to drift. As the government of the whole United Kingdom, it is our duty to take the necessary steps to preserve peace and stability,” added Truss.

The Bill follows 18 months of discussions with the EU for a negotiated solution to “fix” what the UK sees as “problems which are baked into the Protocol” and the government maintains it is “consistent” with international law.

But it has been heavily criticised by senior EU figures.

A spokesperson for Ireland’s foreign minister Simon Coveney said the bill “marks a particular low point in the UK’s approach to Brexit” and said the plan would “ratchet up” tension and breach the UK’s international commitments.

But Prime Minister Johnson has insisted the legislation would introduce “relatively simple” changes and said it would be a “gross overreaction” by the EU.

Under the new legislation, the British government wants to remove “unnecessary” paperwork on goods checks and that businesses in Northern Ireland will get the same tax breaks as those elsewhere in the UK. The bill will also ensure that any trade disputes are resolved by “independent arbitration” and not by the European Court of Justice, it adds.

With Ireland an EU country and Northern Ireland part of the United Kingdom, the Northern Ireland Protocol was always the toughest aspect of the Brexit negotiations which have continued to plague both sides ever since Britain voted to leave the EU six years ago.



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POST COMMENTS (1)

Kalidan Singh

Jun 14, 2022
I have a lot of admiration for the Brits who voted for Brexit. UK is too vibrant, too dynamic, too innovative, too fast moving, and too good to remain chained to fortress EU. It took some good organization and coordination of effort; I commend them. UK does so much better in bilateral deals; they invade the other party and quickly subjugate them with soft and hard power. UK cannot remain at peace; they cannot coexist; they must beat down anyone raising their head anywhere. It is an admirable trait. They understand hierarchies (their lord is US, they are the chief vassal, and everyone else comes after). All things flowing to Washington, if they had their way, would flow through London-based committees and crown. As a shameless Anglophile, with a deep love of cricket, Shakespeare, British TV shows (not news, which is awful), Eric Clapton and the Rolling Stones - I wish them well in this endeavor.

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