EU to delay Brexit legal action amid violence in Northern Ireland

Bloomberg

The European Union (EU) is set to postpone legal action against the UK for breaching the Northern Irish Brexit deal, according to two people familiar with the matter, as riots grip the province.
The EU began proceedings last month after Britain unilaterally extended a waiver on checks on some goods entering Northern Ireland from Great Britain. The temporary exemption was part of the trade agreement aimed at keeping the Irish border free of checkpoints after the UK left the bloc.
The EU had eyed April 15 to push forward, but is holding off as it works on a joint plan with the UK to defuse the issues, according to the people, who asked not to be identified as deliberations are ongoing. The European Commission declined to comment.
Those considerations come as tensions flare in Northern Ireland, with pro-British loyalists protesting against the Brexit deal, which they say risks cutting them off from the mainland at the EU’s behest. The worst riots in years have injured more than 70 police officers, and a hardline approach by the EU risks inflaming the situation further.
Under the deal negotiated by UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Northern Ireland effectively stayed in the EU’s customs union and much of the single market.
This avoided the need for border checks on the island of Ireland, but introduced them for the first time on goods coming into the province from Britain, leading to delays and disruption.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend