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Brexit: EU will 'not be shy' in taking legal
action if UK put Northern Ireland peace deal at risk
By Alice
Tidey •
last updated: 10/09/2020 - 20:13
Brussels warned it will take the UK to court if it
moves ahead with a controversial bill it says will put the Northern Ireland
peace deal at risk.
The EU said
after emergency talks with the UK on Thursday that "the Withdrawal
Agreement contains a number of mechanisms and legal remedies to address
violations of the legal obligations contained in the text – which the European
Union will not be shy in using."
The UK has
until the end of the month to withdraw the controversial measures from its
draft bill, the European Commission said.
London
stuck to its guns in its own statement released around the same time on
Thursday afternoon.
"It is
an established principle of international law that a state is obliged to
discharge its treaty obligations in good faith," the UK government said.
"This
is and will remain the key principle in informing the UK’s approach to
international relations.
The
extraordinary meeting was held a day after the British government unveiled a
draft Internal Market Bill that would allow it to alter parts of the Withdrawal
Agreement Prime Minister Boris Johnson struck with the bloc and which came into
force on February 1 following the UK's official departure from the EU.
The
government argues the bill — which will be debated in Parliament on September
14 — will ensure that it "will be able to deliver its commitment to
protect peace in Northern Ireland and the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement, and to
strengthen and maintain the UK internal market".
But the EU
disputes that.
"The
EU does not accept the argument that the aim of the draft Bill is to protect
the Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement. In fact, it is of the view that it does
the opposite," its statement read.
The
Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland included in the Withdrawal Agreement plans
for the UK territory to continue to apply EU customs rules after the end of the
transition period in order to avoid checks at the border with the Republic of
Ireland, an EU member state
This means
that checks will have to be carried out on certain goods travelling between
Northern Ireland and Great Britain, which the British government says will
result in a de-facto border in the Irish Sea.
The
transition period expires on December 31.
Negotiations
for a future trade deal between the UK and the EU have all but stalled in
recent months with both sides blaming each other for the deadlock.
The eighth
round of Brexit negotiations between the EU's Michel Barnier and the UK's David
Frost is scheduled to conclude on Thursday.
The French
Secretary of State for European Affairs, Clément Beaune, reacted to the
Commission's statement on Twitter, writing: "To all those who doubt it,
sometimes for good reasons: the European Union is firm and united, it defends
its interests and protects its citizens."
"We
will remain calm and utterly determined," he added.
According
to Charles Grant, director of the Cente for European Reform (CER) think tank,
the UK government's draft bill, if passed by parliament, would have several
consequences including a flare-up of violence on the Irish island, increased
support for Scottish independence and a loss of legitimacy on the global stage
with regards to respect for international law. He also predicts that London's
relations with both Brussels and Washington will sour.
Speaker of
the House Nancy Pelosi told reporters on Thursday following a question from ITV
news that the Good Friday Agreement is "very high priority us, Democrats
and Republicans, House and Senate."
"Then
this news comes to us practically in the middle of the night .... that the UK
had decided to undermine the Good Friday accords. What were they thinking?
Whatever it is, I hope they're not thinking if a UK-US bilateral trade
agreement to make up for what they might lose."
"These
Good Friday Accords are just so beautiful and we are not going to have them
tampered with or reward any messing with them of the bilateral UK-US trade
agreement," she added.
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