EU threatens legal action as UK seeks to scrap Northern Ireland treaty
(last modified 2022-06-15T06:06:36+00:00 )
Jun 15, 2022 06:06 UTC
  • EU threatens legal action as UK seeks to scrap Northern Ireland treaty

The European Union (EU) has threatened legal action against the United Kingdom after London unveiled a controversial law to scrap a treaty governing the post-Brexit status of Northern Ireland.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s administration on Monday proposed new legislation that would unilaterally rewrite post-Brexit trade rules for Northern Ireland. The  new legislation seeks to unilaterally amend the Northern Ireland Protocol, which ensures that trade rules surrounding the movement of goods through the province comply with EU norms.

According to Press TV, in a statement released late Monday,  the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Maros Sefcovic, hit out at the “damaging” move and warned that British ministers risked being taken to court.

He said the EU was considering “infringement proceedings” over various failures by the UK.

The 27-nation bloc is expected to launch legal action against the UK government on Wednesday over its decision to scrap some post-Brexit trade arrangements.

Other potential retaliatory measures included compiling a list of British goods that Brussels could hit with trade tariffs.

Britain has previously argued it has grounds to trigger a clause in the deal allowing parts of the Brexit treaty to be abandoned, a move that could badly damage an already fragile diplomatic and economic relationship with the EU.

Johnson has said the deal is “not sustainable in its current form” as it is undercutting peace in the province by setting up trade barriers with the rest of the UK. British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has also blamed the EU for blocking a negotiated settlement.

In Ireland, Prime Minister Micheal Martin said it was “very regrettable for a country like the UK to renege on an international treaty.”

Olaf Scholz, the German Chancellor, also said that the British premier should back away from threats to abandon the agreement that he himself signed in 2019. Scholz has also said there was “no reason” for the UK to make such a move.

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