EU won’t ratify deal if UK tries to violate international law, says Coveney



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Foreign Minister Simon Coveney has warned that the EU will not ratify a trade deal with the UK if it tries to reintroduce parts of controversial legislation aimed at going beyond international law.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson suffered an overwhelming defeat in the House of Lords late Monday over the Internal Market Act, which would allow ministers to violate international law by breaching parts of the Brexit withdrawal agreement reached with the EU last year.

The peers voted 433 to 165 to remove clauses from the bill that would give ministers the right not to unilaterally apply parts of the Northern Ireland protocol and its requirement for some customs controls in the Irish Sea between the North and Greater Brittany to avoid the need for a border on the island.

Speaking on Sky News on Sunday, Coveney said: “If the British government is determined to continue with its Internal Market Bill, to reintroduce parts of that bill that were removed by the House of Lords this week, then I think this is an agreement that will not be ratified by the EU because there is no way that the EU will agree to ratify a new agreement if the British government is breaching the existing agreement that is not even 12 months old ”.

Referring to the post-Brexit trade deal negotiations, Coveney said: “I think I would sum it up by saying that this is very difficult, but also very doable.

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