DUBLIN (Reuters) – Ireland said on Sunday the British government appears ready to invoke emergency unilateral provisions in its Brexit deal governing Northern Ireland’s trading arrangements, a move that would sour ties with Dublin, the EU and the United States.
Britain has repeatedly threatened to activate emergency measures under Article 16, which allows either side to take unilateral action if they deem the deal governing post-Brexit trade is having a strongly negative impact on their interests.
“All the evidence now suggests that the British government are laying the foundations to trigger Article 16, and that of course is a worry,” Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said in an interview broadcast on RTE radio on Sunday.
Britain left the EU last year but has since put off implementing some of the border checks between its province of Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland that the 27-nation bloc says London is obliged to under their divorce deal.
London says the checks are disproportionate and are stoking tensions in Northern Ireland, putting at risk a 1998 peace deal.
The 1998 agreement largely brought an end to the “Troubles” – three decades of conflict between Irish Catholic nationalist militants and pro-British Protestant “loyalist” paramilitaries in which 3,600 people were killed.
Coveney said the British government was not negotiating in good faith and there is increasingly a view across the European Union that the UK is seeking to collapse the talks by “deliberately asking for what they know they can’t get”.
In October, the European Commission proposed a package of measures to ease trade between Britain and Northern Ireland that stopped short of the overhaul London is demanding of post-Brexit trading rules for the province.
“I think the EU can go a little further on some of these issues and have indicated that their package is not the final word from the EU but they want the UK government to work with them,” said Coveney.
(Reporting by Graham Fahy; Editing by Gareth Jones)