EU confirms Brexit checks continue in Northern
Ireland
Boris Johnson calls for ‘common-sensical’ measures to
reduce checks in Northern Ireland.
Movement of Chilled Meats To Northern Ireland
Prohibited From New Year
Checks in Northern Ireland continue despite minister
Edwin Poots' order to halt them |
BY CRISTINA
GALLARDO
February 3,
2022 3:42 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-confirms-brexit-checks-continue-northern-ireland/
LONDON —
Post-Brexit checks at Northern Ireland's ports will continue despite a
ministerial order to halt them, the European Commission said.
Speaking to
reporters Thursday, Commission spokesman Eric Mamer said the EU’s experts on
the ground were satisfied that the checks the U.K. signed up to as part of the
Brexit divorce deal are still being carried out.
On
Wednesday, the Democratic Unionist Party's Edwin Poots — a long-standing
opponent of the post-Brexit trade rules in Northern Ireland — said he had
ordered his most senior official to stop the sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS)
checks at Northern Irish ports from midnight Wednesday.
The checks
are required under the terms of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement’s Northern
Ireland protocol, agreed between the U.K. and the EU. But Poots said he had
received legal advice backing his position that he is able to halt the checks
in the absence of wider approval of Northern Ireland’s ruling Executive.
The U.K.’s
Environment Secretary George Eustice held crisis talks with Poots over his
order to halt Brexit checks, according to British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson’s official spokesman, who also confirmed that “checks are continuing to
take place in Northern Ireland, as they have done before.”
The prime
minister told reporters during a visit to Blackpool Thursday that it was
“crazy” to “have checks on goods that are basically circulating within the
single market of the United Kingdom.”
He called
for “common-sensical … practical steps to weed out, to check on” goods entering
Northern Ireland from Great Britain that might be at risk of entering the EU
single market through the Republic of Ireland.
“Now we can
do that, but without having a full panoply of checks on the GB/NI coast and at
the airport, and that’s the way forward,” Johnson said. “I think practical
common sense is what’s needed.”
Addressing
the House of Commons Thursday, Eustice said it is “entirely unnecessary at this
stage” for the government to intervene. He told MPs that the “overarching
responsibility” for implementing international agreements rests with the U.K.
government, but “delivering many of the requirements under the Northern Ireland
protocol, including agri-food checks, are a devolved matter and responsibility
for doing so falls to the Department for Agriculture, Environment and Rural
Affairs in the Northern Ireland Executive.”
Mamer
refused to speculate on whether the EU could retaliate by suspending the Brexit
trade deal if the Northern Ireland protocol requirements were not met,
stressing that for the moment the Commission’s “preliminary information” is
that “those checks are continuing.”
“What
concerns us is not what are the arrangements that are found within the United
Kingdom on who is responsible for taking what decision when it comes to the
checks, but the fact that the provisions that are in the agreement, on the
checks which are foreseen by the agreement, will be respected,” he said.
Brussels
stressed the protocol is the “one and only solution” the EU and the U.K. have
found to protect the Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement, which ended decades of
sectarian violence in Northern Ireland.
Business
lobby groups argue they need certainty about what regulations they need to
comply with and simplicity to keep moving goods across the border.
The
director of the Northern Ireland Retail Consortium, Aodhán Connolly, said:
“Even if the checks are not in place there is a requirement to have the correct
authorizations. To put it another way, even though the likelihood of getting
stopped on the roads is small, we still all have valid insurance.”
U.K.
Foreign Secretary Liz Truss is holding a video call with Commission Vice
President Maroš Šefčovič on making the protocol less burdensome for people and
businesses in Northern Ireland.
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