Brexit talks: Joe Biden says UK and Ireland must
not have hard border
US president-elect’s renewed call for Good Friday
peace deal to be honoured could complicate Britain’s negotiations with EU
Reuters
Wed 25 Nov
2020 00.56 GMTLast modified on Wed 25 Nov 2020 01.12 GMT
The US
president-elect, Joe Biden, has repeated his call for the border between
Ireland and the United Kingdom to remain open as the contentious issue
threatens to complicate the final stages of the Brexit process.
Biden had
stressed the importance of protecting Northern Ireland’s peace deal in the
Brexit process in a call with the UK’s prime minister, Boris Johnson, after the
Democrat won the US election against Donald Trump. He also said that he had
discussed the issue with other European leaders.
Johnson’s
government is seeking a trade deal with the European Union but says it is
willing to leave without one. That could complicate the situation at the
sensitive Northern Irish border with Ireland – the UK’s only land border with
the EU.
Biden told
journalists in Wilmington, Delaware, on Tuesday that the border must be open.
“We do not
want a guarded border,” he said, answering a question from a reporter on what
he would say to Brexit negotiators.
The 1998
Good Friday peace deal helped to end Northern Ireland’s 30 years of sectarian
violence and created institutions for cross-border cooperation on the island of
Ireland.
Johnson put
forward legislation in September that would break the Northern Ireland protocol
of the Brexit divorce treaty that seeks to avoid a physical customs border
between the British province and EU-member Ireland.
Biden, who
has talked about the importance of his Irish heritage, warned months ago as the
Democratic presidential candidate that the UK must honour the 1998 agreement as
it withdraws from the bloc or there can be no separate US trade deal.
Johnson has
never met Biden and commentators have suggested the prime minister will have to
work hard to foster the “special relationship” between the historic allies.
Ireland’s
prime minister said on Monday he hoped the outline of a Brexit free-trade deal
would emerge by the end of this week, despite what the EU negotiator called
“fundamental divergences” at talks.
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