Thursday, April 11, 2024

EU vaccine export row: Bloc backtracks on controls for NI

The EU has reversed its decision to temporarily override part of the Brexit deal amid an ongoing row over Covid vaccine supplies in the bloc.

The move could have seen checks at the border of Ireland and Northern Ireland to prevent shipments entering the UK.

But the European Commission later said it would ensure the Northern Ireland Protocol is ā€œunaffectedā€.

However, the EU said it had ā€œno choiceā€ but to press on with introducing export controls on vaccines.

The Brexit deal guarantees an open border between the EU and Northern Ireland, with no controls on exported products.

However, Article 16 of the Northern Ireland Protocol part of the deal allows the EU and UK to choose to suspend any aspects they consider are causing ā€œeconomic, societal or environmental difficultiesā€.

Earlier on Friday evening the EU announced it would trigger the clause and introduce the export controls on its vaccines entering Northern Ireland in a bid to prevent the region becoming a backdoor for jabs to be sent to the UK mainland.

It said the actions were ā€œjustifiedā€ to avert problems caused by a lack of supply.

But the proposals sparked concern from all five parties in Northern Irelandā€™s devolved government and Irish prime minister MicheĆ”l Martin.

The EU insists its controls are a temporary scheme, not an export ban. But the World Health Organization is among those criticising the move, saying it could have a knock-on effect around the world.

But later on Friday evening, following talks with UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted that the UK and EU had ā€œagreed on the principle that there should not be restrictions on the export of vaccines by companies where they are fulfilling contractual responsibilitiesā€.

She said the backtrack came after ā€œconstructive talksā€ with Mr Johnson in which he had expressed ā€œgrave concernsā€ about the initial plan.

The BBCā€™s Brussels correspondent Kevin Connelly said Ms von der Leyenā€™s midnight tweet seemed to ā€œwind downā€ the idea that there could be a ā€œvaccine warā€ where jab supplies are prevented from reaching the UK.

ā€˜Trumpian actā€™

Julian Smith, Conservative MP and former Northern Ireland secretary, said the EU had ā€œpulled the emergency cordā€ without following the proper processes that had been agreed over years of negotiations.

He told BBC Radio 4ā€™s Today programme the move came ā€œwithout anywhere near the level of understanding of the Good Friday Agreement, of the sensitivities of the situation in Northern Irelandā€.

ā€œIt was an almost Trumpian act ā€“ Iā€™m very pleased that theyā€™ve changed their minds,ā€ he said, adding that the EUā€™s ā€œmajor issueā€ with its Covid vaccine rollout ā€œdoes not excuseā€ their actions.

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Analysis box by Katya Adler, Europe editor

ā€œMistake,ā€ ā€œmisjudgement,ā€ ā€œblunder.ā€

These are just some of words EU insiders have been using privately to describe the European Commissionā€™s initial decision on Friday to suspend areas of the Brexit deal dealing with Northern Ireland, a part of its Covid vaccine row.

Although it then U-turned on those plans, critics say the damage was already done.

Brussels previously lectured the UK government about respecting the Irish Protocol ā€“ which was painfully and carefully drafted during Brexit negotiations.

Now the EU seemed quick to undermine the agreement.

Member state Ireland felt stung that it hadnā€™t been consulted. This all adds to the impression of chaos surrounding the EUā€™s vaccine rollout.

Brussels was already under fire from a growing number of EU countries for having been slow to sign vaccine contracts with pharmaceutical companies.

This ā€œmishapā€ over the Irish Protocol as Spainā€™s Foreign Minister called it, hasnā€™t exactly helped the commissionā€™s reputation.

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Mr Martin welcomed the EUā€™s reversal, describing it as a ā€œpositive development given the many challenges we face in tackling Covid-19ā€.

However, it was not thought that the move would have directly disadvantaged Northern Ireland, which gets its vaccine supplies through the UK procurement system.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
image captionEuropean Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said talks between her and Boris Johnson had been ā€œconstructiveā€

Despite later backtracking on Article 16, the EU is still introducing new controls giving its member states the power to block exports of the coronavirus vaccine to countries including the UK ā€“ should they want to.

The statement from the European Commission said it in order to tackle ā€œthe current lack of transparencyā€ over vaccine exports outside the EU, it would be introducing a measure requiring that all such exports ā€œare subject to an authorisationā€ by member states.

It was the latest development in a deepening dispute over the vaccine producer AstraZenecaā€™s delivery commitments to the EU.

The bloc agreed to buy up to 400m doses of the vaccine AstraZeneca developed last year with Oxford University, and on Friday the EUā€™s drugs regulator approved the vaccineā€™s use for all adults.

But the firm said that due to problems at one of its EU factories, supplies would be reduced by about 60% in the first quarter of 2021. https://emp.bbc.com/emp/SMPj/2.39.13/iframe.html media captionArlene Foster: EU Covid vaccine controls are an ā€œact of aggressionā€

While the commission rowed back from the Article 16 threat, the EU warned that it would ā€œconsider using all the instruments at its disposalā€ should vaccine supplies ā€œtoward third countries be abused to circumvent the effects of the authorisation systemā€.

The EUā€™s original move was criticised by a string of politicians, with Northern Irelandā€™s First Minister Arlene Foster describing it as ā€œan absolutely incredible act of hostilityā€ that places a ā€œhard borderā€ between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

She told the Today programme the debacle highlighted the EUā€™s ā€œvaccine embarrassment and mismanagementā€.

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