Zürcher Nachrichten - UK MPs debate bill to override N.Ireland Brexit pact

EUR -
AED 3.778216
AFN 75.905864
ALL 98.150222
AMD 412.47486
ANG 1.855937
AOA 939.667453
ARS 1070.560135
AUD 1.655722
AWG 1.854138
AZN 1.761925
BAM 1.955207
BBD 2.079239
BDT 125.381961
BGN 1.957753
BHD 0.387665
BIF 3046.531292
BMD 1.028648
BND 1.408273
BOB 7.115841
BRL 6.186906
BSD 1.029788
BTN 88.999998
BWP 14.453615
BYN 3.37011
BYR 20161.49923
BZD 2.068593
CAD 1.476465
CDF 2914.159871
CHF 0.938683
CLF 0.037503
CLP 1034.809554
CNY 7.541531
CNH 7.559091
COP 4426.21028
CRC 517.437985
CUC 1.028648
CUP 27.25917
CVE 110.231557
CZK 25.237054
DJF 183.382581
DKK 7.461184
DOP 63.260193
DZD 139.648227
EGP 51.879958
ERN 15.429719
ETB 132.043056
FJD 2.392834
FKP 0.847181
GBP 0.841501
GEL 2.921225
GGP 0.847181
GHS 15.266368
GIP 0.847181
GMD 73.551574
GNF 8903.169051
GTQ 7.949588
GYD 215.354664
HKD 8.010899
HNL 26.195798
HRK 7.590957
HTG 134.495273
HUF 411.624025
IDR 16846.218417
ILS 3.710487
IMP 0.847181
INR 88.890251
IQD 1348.984176
IRR 43306.077596
ISK 144.905343
JEP 0.847181
JMD 160.969599
JOD 0.729719
JPY 160.290098
KES 133.36402
KGS 89.95454
KHR 4153.659067
KMF 492.156408
KPW 925.783242
KRW 1498.271977
KWD 0.317297
KYD 0.858135
KZT 546.131655
LAK 22475.072073
LBP 92219.518158
LKR 304.436158
LRD 194.630951
LSL 19.461301
LTL 3.03733
LVL 0.622219
LYD 5.094405
MAD 10.359457
MDL 19.340038
MGA 4841.531134
MKD 61.524876
MMK 3341.008319
MNT 3495.345742
MOP 8.260654
MRU 40.851606
MUR 48.223315
MVR 15.836016
MWK 1785.358343
MXN 21.093794
MYR 4.628405
MZN 65.740931
NAD 19.461301
NGN 1599.722328
NIO 37.89795
NOK 11.665135
NPR 142.398414
NZD 1.833056
OMR 0.396049
PAB 1.029788
PEN 3.884921
PGK 4.192667
PHP 60.1651
PKR 286.773596
PLN 4.260963
PYG 8125.455837
QAR 3.754161
RON 4.974646
RSD 117.096195
RUB 105.435937
RWF 1441.748574
SAR 3.860507
SBD 8.710598
SCR 14.85467
SDG 618.217713
SEK 11.483028
SGD 1.406553
SHP 0.847181
SLE 23.432461
SLL 21570.232475
SOS 588.51573
SRD 36.11067
STD 21290.93511
SVC 9.010223
SYP 13374.48024
SZL 19.450099
THB 35.536186
TJS 11.25563
TMT 3.610554
TND 3.304098
TOP 2.409195
TRY 36.496841
TTD 6.995844
TWD 33.90528
TZS 2592.19259
UAH 43.534792
UGX 3803.845956
USD 1.028648
UYU 45.406224
UZS 13347.885522
VES 55.857238
VND 26109.655827
VUV 122.123147
WST 2.881065
XAF 655.751678
XAG 0.03359
XAU 0.000381
XCD 2.779973
XDR 0.793759
XOF 655.751678
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.238053
ZAR 19.322914
ZMK 9259.070047
ZMW 28.6026
ZWL 331.224211
  • SCS

    0.3700

    11.61

    +3.19%

  • NGG

    1.3300

    57.6

    +2.31%

  • CMSD

    0.3300

    23.53

    +1.4%

  • BTI

    0.0800

    35.8

    +0.22%

  • RIO

    0.0800

    60.46

    +0.13%

  • AZN

    0.3100

    65.68

    +0.47%

  • BP

    0.2100

    31.3

    +0.67%

  • BCC

    3.5700

    127.18

    +2.81%

  • CMSC

    0.4100

    23.29

    +1.76%

  • GSK

    0.7200

    32.8

    +2.2%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    22.73

    +0.84%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.9

    -0.14%

  • RBGPF

    59.5900

    59.59

    +100%

  • JRI

    0.1435

    12.24

    +1.17%

  • RELX

    0.9800

    47.06

    +2.08%

  • VOD

    0.2300

    8.48

    +2.71%

UK MPs debate bill to override N.Ireland Brexit pact
UK MPs debate bill to override N.Ireland Brexit pact / Photo: Paul Faith - AFP/File

UK MPs debate bill to override N.Ireland Brexit pact

British lawmakers were set Monday to take their first vote on a government bill to overhaul post-Brexit trade arrangements in Northern Ireland, despite EU warnings it is illegal and could spark a trade war.

Text size:

Prime Minister Boris Johnson insisted the legislation was needed to remove "unnecessary barriers to trade from Great Britain to Northern Ireland.

"All we're saying is that you can get rid of those, whilst not in any way endangering the EU single market," he told reporters at a G7 summit in Germany, before British MPs began hours of debate on the bill.

In awkward timing, the MPs were to vote late Monday as Johnson socialises at the G7 with top EU leaders, including European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron.

Irish premier Micheal Martin rejected Johnson's attempts to play down the planned changes to the so-called Northern Ireland Protocol, which was agreed as part of the UK's Brexit withdrawal from the European Union.

Martin said "any unilateral decision to breach international law is a major, serious development.

"There can be no getting out of that," he said in Dublin, also warning against another government bill to revamp human rights in the UK that could affect a 1998 peace deal for Northern Ireland.

- 'Legal and necessary' -

The UK government unveiled its plan to unilaterally change trading terms for the politically fraught British province earlier this month, prompting the EU to pledge legal action.

Brussels says overriding the deal it struck in 2019 with Johnson's government breaches international law, and has warned of trade reprisals, which Britain can ill-afford as prices surge on the back of the war in Ukraine.

MPs in the House of Commons began debating the controversial "Northern Ireland Protocol Bill" in mid-afternoon, and were to hold an initial vote on whether to proceed with it late in the evening.

Days of further scrutiny and subsequent votes then loom, and Johnson faces disquiet among some of his own Conservatives about the bill after he only narrowly survived a no-confidence vote this month.

Launching the debate, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said problems were "baked in" to the protocol and wholesale change was needed to entice pro-UK unionists back to a power-sharing government in Belfast.

"It is both legal and necessary," she said, denying the UK was breaching international law and stressing the need to prioritise the peace process.

"We continue to raise the issues of concern with our European partners, but we simply cannot allow the situation to drift," Truss added.

- 'Unrealistic' -

On Sunday, the bloc's ambassador to Britain, Joao Vale de Almeida, said the legislation did break international, EU and UK law, and was "unrealistic".

"We are committed to find the practical solutions on implementation, but we cannot start talking if the baseline is to say everything we have agreed before is to be put aside," he added.

The protocol requires checks on goods arriving into Northern Ireland from England, Scotland and Wales, to track products that could be potentially headed to the bloc via the Republic of Ireland.

This creates a customs border down the Irish Sea, keeping Northern Ireland in the EU's customs orbit to avoid a politically sensitive hard border between the territory and EU member Ireland.

Unionist parties and the UK government argue the protocol is threatening the 1998 Good Friday Agreement that ended three decades of violence over British rule in Northern Ireland.

They want checks to be removed on goods, and animal and plant products, travelling from Great Britain through the creation of a "green channel" for goods intended to stay in Northern Ireland.

A.Wyss--NZN