November 12, 2021
2 mins read

Govt will talk with EU until exhausting all possibilities on NI Protocol

He said it has not been possible so far at least in part because the EU proposals do not go far enough to make the protocol sustainable for the future…reports Asian Lite News.

Brexit Minister David Frost said that three weeks’ talks with the European Union (EU) have not led to the closure of substantial gaps on the Northern Ireland Protocol but Britain will not give up until exhausting all negotiating possibilities.

During the intense discussions for the last three weeks, the aim has been to assess whether it is possible to close the substantial gaps in UK-EU positions and secure potential negotiated resolution, Frost said in the House of Lords, the upper chamber of the British parliament.

He said it has not been possible so far at least in part because the EU proposals do not go far enough to make the protocol sustainable for the future.

He said he wants to protect the integrity of the talks and remain positive.

“I will not give up on this process unless and until it is abundantly clear that nothing more can be done… If we do in due course reach that point, the Article 16 safeguards will be our only option,” Frost said.

The Article 16 of the Northern Ireland Protocol provides both the UK and the EU with a unilateral power to take action should the application of the protocol give rise to “serious economic, societal or environmental difficulties that are liable to persist, or to diversion of trade”.

The UK 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 a renegotiation of 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-China, US & EU to occupy more than 90% carbon space by 2050

Previous Story

‘EU’s Green Deal will fail if anyone is left behind’

Next Story

India’s honey production increased to 1.25 lakh MT in 2021

Latest from -Top News

100% Tariffs? Trump’s Warning to BRICS

Friday’s warning is a repeat of the one that he made on November 30, weeks after winning the 2024 election…reports Asian Lite News Expressing his stance against de-dollarisation vehemently on Friday, Donald

Trump needs to remember the 2026 midterms 

Were the Executive Order restrictions on birth-right citizenship not removed before the 2026 midterm polls, not just Indian-Americans but Hispanic Americans as well would shift from Republicans to the Democrats, writes Prof.

DeepSeek draws global flak over Uyghur censorship 

China’s AI model, DeepSeek, is under scrutiny for allegedly promoting state propaganda, censoring sensitive topics, and harvesting personal data, raising global privacy and human rights concerns.  Human rights activists and international experts
Go toTop