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France's Macron urges UK to 'keep its word' over Brexit

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
France's Macron urges UK to 'keep its word' over Brexit
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson and France's President Emmanuel Macron take part in a bilateral meeting during the G7 summit in Carbis bay, Cornwall on June 12, 2021. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

France on Saturday told UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson to stick to the terms of the Brexit deal he signed with Europe, amid a standoff over new trading arrangements in Northern Ireland.

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Johnson met French President Emmanuel Macron on the sidelines of the G7 summit in southwest England, with Brussels angered by Britain's failure to implement border checks on goods.

A source in Macron's office said he explained to Johnson in no uncertain terms that the UK should "keep its word" and abide by the terms of the deal he signed with the European Union just last December.

Other European leaders attending the summit, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, are expected to deliver the same message.

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The row over the so-called Northern Ireland protocol, agreed separately to the Brexit divorce deal, has dogged the showpiece G7 summit in Cornwall.

The Times reported that President Joe Biden had ordered US diplomats to rebuke London for threatening peace in the UK province by failing to implement border checks.

Macron also blasted the UK and said it was "not serious to want to revisit, in the month of July, what we finalised after years of work in December".

"I believe in the power of treaties. I believe in seriousness. Nothing is renegotiable. Everything is applicable," he said in Paris on Thursday.

Britain has repeatedly called for more flexibility and pragmatism from the EU, given Northern Ireland's violent past and its fragile current peace.

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Under the protocol, checks are supposed to be carried out on goods arriving in Northern Ireland from mainland Britain -- England, Scotland and Wales.

That is to avoid unchecked goods going into the European single market and customs union, which the UK left this year, via Northern Ireland's neighbour, EU member state Ireland.

But pro-British unionist communities in Northern Ireland are opposed to the protocol, arguing that checks drive a wedge between the province and the rest of the UK.

The checks have been suspended after threats to port staff and violence in recent months, while London has indicated it could extend a grace period on chilled meat products at the end of this month.

The European Commission has threatened reprisals, including targeted tariffs, if it does so, sparking talk in the UK press of a "sausage war" with Europe.

Johnson played down any rift after talks with Biden on Thursday, insisting the US president did not sound the alarm over the issue.

He said there was "absolutely common ground" on all sides in upholding the landmark 1998 peace deal that ended three decades of violence over British rule in Northern Ireland.

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Anonymous 2021/06/13 09:18
The court jester finds it very difficult to keep his word over anything. He was fired from his first two jobs as a "journalist" for stretching the truth. All through his life he has always batted out of his league but has never realised that the league he aspires to laugh at him not with him and always will do.

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