EU takes new legal action against UK over post-Brexit deal changes

2 years ago 18
ARTICLE AD BOX

Protesters holding EU and Ireland flagsImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

The UK government says the Northern Ireland Protocol has disrupted trade between Northern Ireland and Great Britain

The EU has announced new legal action against the UK government over its plans to scrap parts of the post-Brexit deal for Northern Ireland.

Ministers tabled a bill on Monday aimed at unilaterally changing trade, tax and governance arrangements in the 2020 deal.

The treaty was agreed by both sides but the UK says it has disrupted trade and power-sharing in Northern Ireland.

But the EU says overriding parts of the deal would break international law.

The Northern Ireland Protocol is a special arrangement that keeps Northern Ireland in the EU's single market for goods, avoiding a hard border with the Republic of Ireland.

The arrangement ensured free trade could continue across the Irish land border, which is a sensitive issue because of the history of conflict in Northern Ireland.

But the protocol brought in some new checks on goods moving between Great Britain and Northern Ireland and has been criticised by unionist politicians.

However, the majority of politicians elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly in last month's elections support the arrangements.

The European Commission said it would restart legal action - paused in March 2021 - over the UK's decision to delay checks on certain goods arriving into Northern Ireland from Great Britain.

The Commission also launched two new proceedings over claims the UK has failed in its obligations to share trade data and set up border inspection posts.

These legal steps could eventually lead to the UK being fined under a dispute process overseen by the European Court of Justice (ECJ).

The UK government says it would prefer to agree changes with the EU, rather than act alone to scrap parts of the protocol.

Earlier this week, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said the government's move was "a reasonable, practical solution to the problems facing Northern Ireland" and that the UK could "only make progress through negotiations if the EU are willing to change the protocol itself".

The issue could come up when Boris Johnson appears in front of MPs for Prime Minister's Questions later.

Read Entire Article