EU sues UK after plan to override deal on N. Ireland
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[June 15, 2022]
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Commission
launched two new legal proceedings against Britain on Wednesday after
London published plans to override some post-Brexit rules governing
Northern Irish trade, and resumed another challenge it had previously
paused.
The proceedings could result in the European Court of Justice (ECJ)
imposing fines, although these would likely be more than a year away.
London has proposed scrapping some checks on goods from the rest of the
United Kingdom arriving in the British province and challenged the role
of the ECJ to decide on parts of the post-Brexit arrangement agreed by
the EU and Britain.
European Commission Vice President Maros Sefcovic, who oversees EU
relations with former EU member Britain, said there was no justification
for unilaterally changing an international agreement
"Let's call a spade a spade. This is illegal," he told a news
conference, adding it cast a shadow on relations at a time when
international cooperation was even more important, a reference to the
alliance against Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
The three legal proceedings do not relate to Britain's new plans, but to
the EU belief that Britain has failed to implement the protocol that
governs Northern Irish trading.
The two new suits charge Britain with failing to ensure adequate staff
and infrastructure to carry out checks in Northern Ireland and not
providing the EU with sufficient trade data.
The other, paused a year ago to improve the atmosphere around talks,
relates to the movement of agri-food products. Sefcovic said that the EU
might take the case to the ECJ if Britain failed to address the EU's
charges within two months.
Sefcovic said Brussels still wanted to resume talks with Britain to
resolve difficulties in shipping British products to Northern Ireland.
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A truck drives past a 'money changed' sign for euro, sterling and
dollar currencies on the border between Northern Ireland and
Ireland, in Jonesborough, Northern Ireland, May 19, 2022. REUTERS/Clodagh
Kilcoyne/File Photo
"We decided that our response should be measured,
should be proportionate. And we are offering not only legal action
here today but we've been fleshing out what concretely we could do,"
he said.
The British province is in the EU single market for goods, meaning
imports from the rest of the United Kingdom are subject to customs
declarations and sometimes require checks on their arrival. The
arrangement was set to avoid reinstating border controls between
Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland, which were dropped after the
1998 Good Friday peace agreement.
The arrangement has inflamed pro-British unionist parties by
effectively creating a border in the Irish Sea.
The Commission made a series of proposals last October to ease
customs formalities and cut checks and on Wednesday published a
sample three-page certificate that would accompany a truck carrying
multiple goods on Wednesday.
"Not 300, not 30, three. This is how simple it is and what we can do
if we work well together," Sefcovic said, holding up the
certificate.
"What we are putting on the table is oven-ready," he said, in
reference to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's 2019
pre-election promise about passing the Brexit divorce deal, while
adding this was not a 'take-it-or-leave-it' offer.
(Reporting by Philip BlenkinsopEditing by John Chalmers)
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