November 18, 2021
2 mins read

UK-EU deal on N.Ireland protocol likely soon

As part of the Brexit deal, the Protocol stipulates that Northern Ireland remains in the EU single market and customs union to avoid a hard border between the region and the Republic of Ireland….reports Asian Lite News

The UK’s Brexit Minister David Frost said that the country and the European Union (EU) are likely to reach a deal on changes to the disputed Northern Ireland Protocol by Christmas.

“I think it can be done, whether it will be done is a different question,” Xinhua news agency quoted Frost as saying to the BBC, after Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said the issues with the protocol could be resolved “before Christmas”.

“I would like to progress this as fast as we possibly can, I’m glad there’s ambition on the EU side from what Simon says,” Frost was quoted by the BBC as saying.

The question of how goods move from Britain into Northern Ireland is obviously at the heart of the talks and there is no reason why goods going to stay in Northern Ireland need to go through processes, Frost said.

As part of the Brexit deal, the Protocol stipulates that Northern Ireland remains in the EU single market and customs union to avoid a hard border between the region and the Republic of Ireland.

However, this leads to a new “regulatory” border between Britain and Northern Ireland.

Britain and the EU view changing the protocol as a long-term solution to post-Brexit trade disruption in Northern Ireland.

Britain outlined its proposals in a government paper in July, which observers interpreted as an intention to renegotiate the protocol.

In response, the EU published its own package to facilitate the movement of goods from Britain to Northern Ireland, including cutting customs formalities, simplified certification, and an 80 per cent reduction of checks on retail goods for Northern Ireland’s consumers.

It said it would guarantee an uninterrupted supply of medicine to the people of Northern Ireland, by changing EU rules.

However, the two sides remain poles apart on the more challenging issue of the oversight role of the European Court of Justice in Northern Ireland.

ALSO READ: New defence strategy to help EU face situations like Belarus

Previous Story

China building border villages in Bhutan

Next Story

India’s Suryakirans, Tejas Dazzle Spectators

Latest from -Top News

Dhaka’s Ruling Party Rejects Kolkata Link

Slamming the Yunus administration, the Awami League alleged that “the illegal usurper government is actively spreading these baseless rumours….reports Asian Lite News Bangladesh’s Awami League has rejected media reports that it opened

1.5M Afghans Forced Back in 2025

UN warned that these women and girls face significant threats upon their return to Afghanistan, including poverty, early marriage, violence, and unprecedented restrictions. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has warned that

How BRICS Break the West’s Grip

Harvansh Chawla pointed to the Ruble-Rupee trade arrangement between the two nations, saying it has streamlined transactions and lessened reliance on Western financial systems. The BRICS bloc is proving crucial in enabling

Greece may extend North Africa asylum ban

In July, the government stopped processing asylum requests from migrants arriving from North Africa by sea for three months in an effort to curb arrivals from Libya to Crete Plevris said he

EU Demands Seat in US–Russia Ceasefire Talks

Kallas revealed that she would convene an online meeting of EU foreign ministers on Monday to discuss “our next steps EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said any US–Russia agreement must involve
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Mayors Support Net Zero

Metro Mayors and leaders from across the UK tell Government

Health service rolls out arthritis drug Baricitinib to treat Covid

It will be the seventh COVID treatment approved in total