Dublin and London blast Brussels over Brexit deal
override in vaccine fight
The UK government is ‘considering next steps’ after
the Commission’s decision to suspend the Northern Ireland Protocol.
BY EMILIO
CASALICCHIO, SHAWN POGATCHNIK, ANNA ISAAC AND CRISTINA GALLARDO
January 29,
2021 9:02 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-eu-coronavirus-vaccine-fight-crisis-call/
LONDON —
The British and Irish governments both registered official protests with the
European Commission on Friday over its moves to override a crucial part of the
Brexit deal following a fight over the supply of coronavirus vaccines.
From
Saturday, the bloc will impose export controls on jabs made on the Continent to
some 100 nations worldwide, which will cover Northern Ireland as part of the
U.K. — imposing an effective trade border with the Republic.
Brussels
triggered Article 16 of the Northern Ireland Protocol in order to do so, which
allows one side to unilaterally override the deal in certain circumstances. The
move is explosive because it is anathema to the Good Friday Agreement, aimed at
securing peace on the island of Ireland, and could trigger a retaliatory move
from the U.K.
The
Commission said it triggered Article 16 using the emergency procedure, which
allows it to “act fast before the Member States are formally consulted” due to
“the urgency of the situation, justified by the lack of transparency in a time
where the production and delivery of vaccines is still in the building-up phase
and the ensuing temporary global shortage.”
U.K.
Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove called European Commission Vice President
Maroš Šefčovič "to express the U.K.’s concern over a lack of notification
from the EU about its actions in relation to the Northern Ireland
protocol," a Downing Street spokesperson said. Gove said Britain would
"now be carefully considering next steps."
"The
U.K. has legally-binding agreements with vaccine suppliers and it would not
expect the EU, as a friend and ally, to do anything to disrupt the fulfilment
of these contracts," the spokesperson said, "The U.K. government has
reiterated the importance of preserving the benefits of the Belfast/Good Friday
agreement and the commitments that have been made to the two communities."
The Irish
government was also taken by surprise. "Irish Prime Minister Micheál
Martin telephoned Commission President [Ursula] von der Leyen tonight to
express his government’s unease and unhappiness with the move," said a
spokesperson for the Irish government.
"We
are working with the EU Commission to try to resolve this issue and protect the
integrity and operation of the NI Protocol," tweeted Irish Foreign
Minister Simon Coveney.
Tensions
rose after vaccine firm AstraZeneca told the bloc it would be unable to deliver
millions of vaccine doses because it had prior obligations to Britain. The
export ban could prevent Pfizer doses from reaching the U.K., but Brussels was
worried Northern Ireland could be a backdoor for imports.
DUP leader
Arlene Foster condemned the "incredible act of hostility" by the EU,
arguing a "hard border" had been placed between Northern Ireland and
the Republic.
Alliance
Party deputy leader Stephen Farry urged the two sides to avoid a “vaccine war,”
arguing: “everyone needs to calm down.” But Ulster Unionist Party leader Steve
Aiken demanded Britain invoke Article 16 itself in response.
Raoul
Ruparel, a former Europe adviser to Downing Street, said it felt
"unnecessary" to invoke Article 16 of the protocol, especially since
the procurement of vaccines is handled centrally in the U.K. and not by its
constituent nations.
Anton
Spisak, trade policy lead at the Tony Blair Institute and a former Brexit
negotiator, said: "It seems that the export ban will almost certainly lead
to serious tensions with the UK government and the EU, especially because
they've decided to override the Northern Ireland Protocol. That will be seen
very badly in London, not least because it will be seen to have justified the
whole enterprise of Brexit."
Shadow
Northern Ireland Secretary, Labour's Louise Haigh, said the move was
"deeply destabilising and undermines the huge efforts being made to make
the Protocol work." She added: “Unilateral actions like this do nothing to
aid the stability in Northern Ireland which the Protocol was designed to
preserve."
Simon
Hoare, chair of the Northern Ireland committee in the U.K. parliament, called
the EU's move "unconscionable folly."
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