EU to outline Brexit trade solutions for N.Ireland this
month -diplomats
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[September 14, 2021] BRUSSELS
(Reuters) - The European Commission is expected to outline by the end of
September plans that could ease the movement of goods from Britain to
Northern Ireland in an effort to ease tensions resulting from Brexit, EU
diplomats said.
The EU rejected a UK demand to renegotiate the new trading position of
the British province. But a deputy head of the bloc's executive
Commission, Maros Sefcovic, last week promised "creative and solid new
solutions" under the current deal.
Under the so-called protocol, Britain agreed to leave some EU rules in
place in Northern Ireland and accept checks on goods arriving there from
the rest of the United Kingdom, in order to preserve an open land border
with Ireland, an EU member state.
But London has since said that was not working and must be changed.
EU diplomats said the Commission's new ideas, which also include greater
involvement of politicians and others in Northern Ireland, would be
announced this month.
"Possible solutions would centre around making existing checks less
laborious, limiting the amount of paperwork needed," said one EU
diplomat who deals with Brexit, adding the Commission might propose
legal changes on the 27 nations' side to give room for greater leniency
towards Britain.
The new package is expected to go beyond previous Commission proposals
that included passage for guide dogs, simpler tagging for livestock and
easier circulation of medicines, said a second diplomat.
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Signs reading 'No Irish Sea border' and 'Ulster is British, no
internal UK Border' are seen affixed to a lamp post at the Port of
Larne, Northern Ireland, March 6, 2021. Picture taken March 6, 2021.
REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File Photo
National ambassadors to the EU are due to discuss the plans on
Wednesday, followed by national ministers who deal with European affairs
at a meeting on Sept 21.
The extension beyond the end of September of grace periods on further
checks and trade limitations the EU deems necessary to protect its
single market of 450 million people has given some space for talks.
Britain's Brexit minister David Frost said on Monday that the EU needed
to move in negotiations of the protocol, warning that London could
unilaterally suspend it.
The Commission, which oversees EU-UK relations on behalf of the 27 EU
countries, has said it is willing to interpret the protocol flexibly,
but not renegotiate it, rejecting outright a British call to end
oversight by the European Court of Justice.
(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop and Gabriela Baczynska; Editing by
Gareth Jones)
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