Europe
4 years ago

Post-Brexit bill breaks international law, UK acknowledges

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Britain threw Brexit trade talks into chaos on Wednesday by announcing draft legislation that explicitly acknowledges some of its provisions would break international law, according to a document.

The proposals, which the government has said would break international law “in a very specific and limited way”, has contributed to concerns that Britain could leave the European Union’s single market in four months with no new agreement on trade, reports Reuters.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told parliament the bill was “a legal safety net to protect our country against extreme or irrational interpretations” of the Northern Ireland part of the EU Withdrawal Agreement, a binding treaty with the EU, that could threaten peace in the British province.

A copy of the Internal Markets Bill seen by Reuters says that certain provisions are “to have effect notwithstanding inconsistency or incompatibility with international or other domestic law”.

The bill, if approved, would give ministers the power to ignore parts of the Northern Ireland protocol of the Withdrawal Agreement by modifying export declarations and other exit procedures.

It will be subject to debate and approval by both chambers of parliament before it becomes law.

Britain quit the EU in January but has remained part of the single market under a status quo agreement that expires in December. It has been negotiating a trade deal to take effect from Jan. 1, but says it is willing to walk away if it cannot agree favourable terms.

Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said he would speak to Johnson to express “very strong concerns” about the plans while his deputy Leo Varadkar called it a “kamikaze” threat that had backfired.

Asked how he could expect Britons to obey the law if his government was willing to undermine it, Johnson said: “We expect everybody in this country to obey the law.”

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