Irish Prime Minister (Taoiseach) Leo Varadkar speaks to the press after a meeting with the French president at the Elysee Palace in Paris on April 2, 2019 (AFP Photo/ Ludovic MARIN) |
Paris (AFP) - Ireland does not want to become a "back door" into the EU single market for Britain in the event of a no-deal Brexit, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said Tuesday in Paris.
"We
don't want Ireland to be a back door to the single market, anymore than anybody
wants us to become a back door to the single market," Varadkar said after
a meeting in Paris with French President Emmanuel Macron.
Varadkar
said he was committed to preventing goods that do not meet EU norms from
entering Ireland or the EU.
"In
the unlikely event that we have a no-deal and the UK were to do trade deals
with the US or China and we had chlorinated chicken or hormone beef, or
products made by child labour in Asian countries, the last thing we would want
is that coming south of the border into the Republic of Ireland.
"And
we certainly wouldn't want it getting through the Republic of Ireland into the
European Union," he said.
But he
again reiterated his opposition to creating a hard border between Ireland and
Northern Ireland, for fear that it could jeopardise peace in the British
province.
Varadkar
said that while physical inspections would be necessary on imports like live
animals, they could be done at ports in Northern Ireland rather than in the
Irish Republic.
"That
is the right and best place for them," he said.
But the
British government has refused to envisage carrying out customs checks on goods
arriving in northern Ireland from Britain, arguing that to do so would drive a
wedge through the United Kingdom.
The EU's
Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, said Tuesday that the EU was working with
Ireland "on a unilateral basis in the event of no deal, to know where we
can do these checks," but refused to elaborate further.
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