EU, UK commit to ‘redoubling’ efforts following
Irish border row
Show of unity follows pressure from Northern Ireland’s
unionists to rework Brexit deal.
Article 50 negotiations with the United Kingdom
BY LAURA
GREENHALGH AND KARL MATHIESEN
January 30,
2021 5:40 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/arlene-foster-brexit-deal-retaliation-eu-vaccine-hostility/
The EU and
U.K. are “jointly committed to redoubling our efforts to addressing outstanding
issues" following a diplomatic spat over vaccine controls at the Irish
border, officials from both sides said Saturday.
European
Commission Vice President Maroš Šefčovič and U.K. Cabinet Minister Michael Gove
spoke via phone after Brussels set off a political firestorm by moving to
override the Brexit deal as part of an effort to limit coronavirus vaccine
exports. That decision was quickly reversed following immediate fallout in
Dublin, London and Belfast.
In
identical tweets Saturday evening, Šefčovič and Gove wrote: “Our shared
priority is making sure the Protocol works for the people of Northern Ireland,
protecting gains of the peace process and avoiding disruption to everyday
lives.”
The
statement came after Northern Ireland’s First Minister Arlene Foster said the
U.K. should suspend the free flow of goods across the Irish border in
retaliation for the EU’s clumsy attempt to block vaccine exports to Britain.
Foster told
BBC Radio 4 that the European Commission's unilateral — albeit short-lived —
suspension of the Northern Ireland post-Brexit trade protocol on Friday was an
“absolutely incredible act of hostility.”
Foster, who
leads the Democratic Unionist Party, called the Commission's move “disgraceful”
and said it showed that arrangements for the Irish border under the Brexit deal
must be reconsidered.
Later she
told Ireland's RTE: "The protocol is unworkable, let's be very clear about
that, and we need to see it replaced because otherwise there is going to be
real difficulties here in Northern Ireland.”
The leader
of Ireland's Sinn Féin opposition Mary Lou McDonald tweeted Saturday afternoon:
“Calls for a tit for tat invocation of article 16 by the British government are
utterly reckless. The protections of the Irish protocol were hard won. No one
should place those protections in jeopardy. Brexit causes real damage to
Ireland we need to protect our island.”
The former
top civil servant in the U.K.’s Department for Exiting the European Union,
Philip Rycroft, told Sky News there was a "risk" that the EU had
lowered the bar for invoking the article, thus weakening the Brexit deal.
“It was
wholly disproportionate to what they were seeking to achieve — it was
unnecessary. But it bears all the hallmarks for a bureaucracy that is under
huge pressure, acting before it was thinking straight,” he said.
Meanwhile,
the U.K.’s Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said he had a “constructive
conversation” with Valdis Dombrovskis, the EU’s trade commissioner, on Saturday
amid the ongoing clash over vaccine deliveries.
“I was
reassured the EU has no desire to block suppliers fulfilling contracts for vaccine
distribution to the UK. The world is watching and it is only through
international collaboration that we will beat this pandemic,” Raab wrote on
Twitter.
This story
has been updated.
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