Boris Johnson reads riot act to EU over vaccines at Irish border
Britain is now ‘confident’ its supplies of the coronavirus vaccines will be delivered.
Britain expects its contractual arrangements on coronavirus vaccines to be honoured following disagreements with the EU over supplies of the shot.
Following a U-turn by the European Commission on threats on Friday to stop the free-flow of vaccines over the Irish border, Cabinet Office Secretary Michael Gove said late on Saturday Britain was “confident” its supplies of vaccines would be delivered.
“We’ve entered into contractual arrangements with AstraZeneca and Pfizer — we expect those arrangements to be honoured,” Mr Gove said.
He said after exchanges with Prime Minister Boris Johnson, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen was “clear that she understood exactly the UK government’s position”.
Mr Johnson had told Ms von der Leyen of his “grave concerns about the potential impact”.
Mr Gove said the EU made a mistake when it threatened to invoke article 16 of the post-Brexit Northern Ireland Protocol to monitor and in some cases block exports of vaccines produced in EU plants. “They recognise that they have made a mistake,” he said. “We want to work with our friends and neighbours in the EU.
“We recognise some of the difficulties and the pressures that they face.”
Mr Johnson spoke late on Friday with Ms von der Leyen as the row over shortages of a COVID-19 vaccine developed by the British-Swedish drugs group AstraZeneca threatened to boil over.
British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab wrote on Twitter on Saturday that during conversations with EU Commission vice-president Valdis Dombrovkis, he had been “reassured the EU has no desire to block suppliers fulfilling contracts for vaccine distribution to the UK”.
“The world is watching and it is only through international collaboration that we will beat this pandemic,” Mr Raab said.
Northern Ireland First Minister Arlene Forster on Saturday urged Britain to remove a post-Brexit protocol with the EU after it became the focus of a diplomatic row over COVID vaccines. “The protocol is unworkable, let’s be very clear about that, and we need to see it replaced because otherwise there is going to be real difficulties here in Northern Ireland,” Ms Foster told BBC radio.
The leader of the Democratic Unionist Party has long been critical of the protocol that allows Northern Ireland to follow EU Customs rules and avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland. “It’s absolutely disgraceful, and I have to say the Prime Minister now needs to act very quickly to deal with the real trade flows that are being disrupted between Great Britain and Northern Ireland,” she said.
“The commission will ensure that the Ireland/Northern Ireland Protocol is unaffected,” the EC said in a statement.
Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, told The Times Brussels needed to step back from the escalating row over vaccines.
“We are facing an extraordinarily serious crisis, which is creating a lot of suffering, which is causing a lot of deaths in the UK, in France, in Germany, everywhere,” he said.
“I believe that we must face this crisis with responsibility, certainly not with the spirit of one upmanship or unhealthy competition.”
The EU still has plans to go ahead with a broader vaccine export ban that could affect supplies of the Pfizer-BioNTech jab in Britain.
AFP