Brexit

British MPs warn country not ready for Brexit

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

British MPs warn country not ready for Brexit

D-DAY. For Terry Goodwin, preparations for D-Day, which will mark the United Kingdom's exit from the European single market, have a bitter taste as his company Conference Haul International is struggling to recover from the shock of the pandemic. Two weeks before the deadline, companies still don't know what the new regulations will be, but road hauliers know that whatever the outcome of negotiations on the post-Brexit relationship they will be subject to a lot of red tape and border controls.

Photo by Adrian Dennis/AFP

Britain leaves the EU single market and customs union on January 1, 2021

Britain has not yet installed all the complex IT systems and port infrastructure needed to ensure Brexit runs smoothly, a group of British members of parliament (MP) warned in a report released Saturday, December 19. 

The Committee on the Future Relationship with the European Union (EU), a cross-party group of lawmakers, released the report after meeting Thursday online.

The group said they were “concerned about the overall state of readiness” and warned that “some decisions on infrastructure have been taken too late”.

The “early months… are likely to be difficult”, the report said, echoing comments by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who conceded the switch to new rules “might be difficult at first.”

“With just seven working days until the end of the transition period, significant concerns remain,” said Hilary Benn, a prominent Labour MP who chairs the committee.

Britain left the EU in January but is in a standstill transition period until December 31, during which the bloc’s rules mostly still apply while trade talks are held.

Deal or no deal, change is coming on January 1, as Britain will leave the EU single market and customs union.

But Benn said the government “still cannot provide business, traders, and citizens with certainty about what will happen in all the areas affected by the negotiations.”

The report criticized delayed delivery of IT systems in places such as ports, making it hard for businesses and traders to learn to use new government systems and update their in-house technology by the year-end deadline.

Ports also needed to build major new infrastructure for customs and border controls but in November were still waiting to hear if their bids to a £200 million government fund were successful, the report quoted port officials as saying.

‘Patchy at best’

Some major ports such as Dover in southern England and Holyhead in Wales do not have the space on site for such facilities and will need to build elsewhere, the report said.

The report also said there could be problems with getting enough vets and other professionals to check goods and process customs declarations.

It warned that the government needed to have “robust contingency plans to deal with whatever happens” after January 1.

The MPs urged the EU to delay introducing import procedures on British goods, after the UK did the same for EU goods.

The government’s campaigns to encourage businesses to get abreast of the new rules is “patchy at best,” the report said.

The UK will also lose access to key agreements such as the European Arrest Warrant, which allows a criminal suspected by one state to be arrested in any other, while a new bilateral agreement with the EU is “unlikely” to be ready in time, the report said.

The people in Northern Ireland, which will have the EU’s only land border with Britain from next year, “deserved to know far sooner the terms of trade within their own country.”

London and Brussels have agreed a complicated system for trade, which will see the British province bound by most EU rules because of the need to keep the border with EU member Ireland open.

MPs praised it as a “pragmatic solution,” given fears that the return of hard border infrastructure could reignite sectarian conflict. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!