LONDON (Reuters) - The leader of the Northern Irish political party that
props up British Prime Minister Theresa May’s government said the
European Union’s chief negotiator needs to do more to understand the
views of unionists, the BBC reported on Monday.
Northern Ireland will be the UK’s only land frontier with the EU
after its leaves the bloc in March 2019. Both sides say they are
committed to keeping the border with Ireland open, but finding a
practical solution has proved elusive so far.
Arlene
Foster, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, said EU chief Brexit
negotiator Michel Barnier needed to understand that any solution that
divides Northern Ireland from the rest of the United Kingdom will not
get her party’s support.
“Michel
Barnier’s trying to present himself as someone who cares deeply about
Northern Ireland, and if that is the case he needs to hear the fact that
we are part of the United Kingdom (and) will remain part of the United
Kingdom constitutionally, politically and economically,” Foster told the sbn
“I don’t think he does understand the wider unionist culture of
Northern Ireland,” Foster said. “His proposal of us being in an
all-Ireland regulatory scenario with a border down the Irish Sea simply
does not work.”
Britain says an EU-UK free trade deal to be
sealed by 2021 can resolve the border issue. Dublin insists the Brexit
treaty must lock in a “backstop” arrangement in case that future pact
does not work, something London signed up to achieving last month.
Barnier,
speaking in the Irish city of Dundalk ahead of a visit to Northern
Ireland, said Foster failed to understand that he was representing the
interests of the 27 countries who will remain in the EU after Brexit and
not those of the United Kingdom.
“I am the negotiator for the
27. Mrs Foster and some others need to understand that and respect
that,” Barnier told a press conference with Irish Prime Minister Leo
Varadkar.
“I am not willing to engage in any kind of polemics with Mrs Foster,” he said
Barnier said Britain and EU negotiators must make rapid progress on the
border issue by a June EU leaders meeting that will be a “stepping
stone” towards attempting to reach a final Brexit deal in October