Brexit
Ireland says #Brexit talks can't move on without clarity over border
Britain’s talks on exiting the European Union cannot progress, as London wishes, to cover trade relations until it give more clarity on what will happen at the border with Ireland, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney (pictured) said on Friday (27 October), writes Padraic Halpin.
“We don’t need all the answers but we certainly need to have more assurance than we have today and we need some understanding that if the trade negotiations collapse, which could happen, that the Irish issues will still be resolved and prioritized.”
With close trading links to Britain, Ireland is considered the EU member most at risk when its neighbour leaves the bloc. That means it needs to plan “for all eventualities” and is already doing so, Coveney said.
Ireland has called for Britain and the EU to reach a bespoke customs union partnership to eliminate the risk of a “hard” border returning between it and Northern Ireland, which until a 1998 peace deal was separated by military checkpoints because of 30 years of sectarian violence in the province.
However, Dublin wants Britain to commit to a fallback option, including potential special arrangements for Northern Ireland, to avoid a customs border should Britain’s plan of maintaining the closest possible ties with the EU fall through.
If those assurances are forthcoming, Ireland will “probably be Britain’s closest friend” in the trade talks, Coveney said.
“I‘m not sure that that view is necessarily shared by many other member states. The idea that Britain can expect that the EU negotiating team is going to be flexible in any kind of significant way, I think is simply not realistic,” he added.
“While Britain is focused hugely on Brexit, it’s a front page story every day, as it is in Ireland, that is not the same in most other countries and I think there’s a need for a dose of reality in that context.”
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