Johnson risks breakup of UK over Northern Ireland
protocol, says Varadkar
Ireland’s deputy PM accuses No 10 of making ‘shocking’
blunders with protocol bill
Rory
Carroll Ireland correspondent
@rorycarroll72
Fri 1 Jul
2022 12.52 BST
Leo
Varadkar, Ireland’s deputy prime minister, has accused the British government
of risking the break-up of the United Kingdom and making “shocking” blunders
over Northern Ireland.
Varadkar
said Boris Johnson’s administration had been undemocratic and disrespectful and
tacitly accused it of being dishonest and dishonourable.
The
tánaiste made the sharp attack in a BBC interview on Thursday night, days after
the Northern Ireland protocol bill – which could override the Brexit deal –
cleared its first hurdle in the House of Commons.
“I think that’s a strategic mistake for people who
want to maintain the union because if you continue to impose things on Northern
Ireland that a clear majority of people don’t want, that means more people will
turn away from the union. It’s a peculiar policy coming from a government that
purports to want to defend the union,” he said.
Varadkar,
who is due to succeed Micheál Martin as taoiseach later this year, said he
found it “shocking and hard to accept” that Downing Street sought unilaterally
to change the protocol. “What the British government is doing now is very
undemocratic and very disrespectful to people in Northern Ireland because it’s
taking that power away from the assembly.”
An
honourable government would honour a treaty it had agreed and abide by
international law, he said. “It is not normal for a democratic government in a
respected country to sign a treaty and then try to pass domestic legislation to
override it,” he said.
Varadkar
rubbished statements from Liz Truss, the UK foreign secretary, who said the
EU’s proposed solutions would worsen bureaucratic impediments. “Well, there are
some people clearly who are able to say a square is a circle. That’s just not
the facts.”
Asked about
a statement from Brandon Lewis, the Northern Ireland secretary, that relations
with Dublin were “great”, Varadkar replied: “In my political lifetime, I’ve
never seen relations this bad.” London did not want to work with Dublin, was
picking fights with Brussels, and not being even-handed in Belfast, he said.
Separately,
in a letter to the Financial Times, Adrian O’Neill, Ireland’s ambassador to the
UK, rebutted an opinion piece by Truss that had defended the protocol
legislation. It would destabilise Northern Ireland by creating a legal and
political vacuum, he said.
Meanwhile,
Michelle O’Neill, Sinn Féin’s deputy leader and putative first minister of
Northern Ireland, on Friday laid a wreath at a cenotaph in Belfast to
commemorate British army soldiers – many from Ireland – who died at the battle
of the Somme in 1916, an important anniversary for unionists.
Sinn Féin
leaders have previously attended first world war commemorations but not in
Belfast. O’Neill attended a low-key event before the city’s official
commemoration. “As political leaders we have a responsibility to reach beyond
our comfort zones and reach out the hand of friendship and to do whatever we
can in terms of leadership and healing the wounds of the past,” she said.
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