UK’s May ‘looking at amending’ Ireland peace deal

London:  British Prime Minister Theresa May is considering solving a Brexit deadlock by amending a 1998 agreement that ended 30 years of violence in Northern Ireland after ditching attempts to negotiate a cross-party deal.

May's plan to amend the 1998 Good Friday Agreement would see the UK and Ireland agree a separate set of principles or add text to "support or reference" the 1998 peace deal, setting out how both sides would guarantee an open border after Brexit, UK's Daily Telegraph newspaper reported.

British Prime Minister Theresa May has to resolve the Irish border issue to win support for her Brexit plan.Credit:Bloomberg

May suffered a heavy defeat in parliament last week when MPs rejected her deal for Britain's exit from the European Union by an overwhelming majority. Many object to a backstop arrangement that the European Union insists on as a guarantee to avoid a hard border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland.

Under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement that largely ended years of violence between Irish republicans and pro-British unionists, border posts were removed and the province was given a power-sharing structure where both communities were represented.

According to The Daily Telegraph, traditionally a Euro-sceptic paper, senior EU sources have called May's new plan a non-starter while British government sources are "sceptical" that it would work, as the plan is likely to prove controversial and would require the consent of all the parties involved in Northern Ireland.

Neale Richmond, a member of Ireland's governing Fine Gael party and chairman of the upper house of parliament's Brexit committee, said the Good Friday Agreement cannot be renegotiated lightly.

Police are focusing on the role of the New IRA in a car bombing in Northern Ireland over the weekend.Credit:AP

Separately, The Sunday Times reported plans to seek a bilateral treaty with the Irish government as a way to remove the contentious backstop arrangement.

Sky News reported that May is expected to set out plans to try to remove the Irish backstop, in an effort to win around the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party.

There are fears that failure to resolve the Northern Ireland border issue could reignite hostilities largely kept in check since the Good Friday Agreement was implemented.

Two men were arrested on Sunday over a car bomb attack in Northern Ireland's Londonderry, with police linking the bomb to the New IRA militant group.

Police said the main focus of the investigation was on the New IRA – one of a small number of groups opposed to the Good Friday Agreement. The New IRA has claimed sporadic attacks in recent years.

Reuters

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