Ireland warns UK over post-Brexit border issue

_104175010_8c029125-bb62-4ddc-9a52-2a9d5770e96bThe UK government has been warned to stick to its commitment to avoid a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic.

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said a time-limited arrangement – or one that could be unilaterally ended by the UK – would never get EU backing.

The border issue is the main barrier to progress between the two sides.

With time running out, Theresa May, who briefs her cabinet on Tuesday, has to get both the EU and her MPs on side.

The UK is due to leave the EU in March, and although 95% of the deal is said to be complete, the tricky bit is proving to be how to honour the commitment by both sides to guarantee no new hard border in Ireland.

It is an issue because after Brexit it will become the UK’s land border with the rest of the EU, which has a single market and customs union so products do not need to be checked when they pass between member states.

There have been warnings that a hard border would undermine the peace process in Northern Ireland.

But unless negotiators can make decisive progress on how to guarantee no new visible checks, a special summit to finalise the UK’s withdrawal will not take place.

Tory Brexiteers are concerned the UK could end up locked in a customs union with the EU without a fixed end point.

Writing in The Sun, former foreign secretary Boris Johnson said this would be an “absolute stinker” of a deal and warned of a “surrender to Brussels” with the UK staying tied to EU rules in years to come.

But Mrs May has insisted that any arrangement would be “strictly time limited”.

This, however, is not the view of the EU.

On Twitter, Mr Coveney said a “time-limited backstop” would not “deliver on previous UK commitments”.

BBC

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*