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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
David Hughes

Measures to avoid a hard border with Northern Ireland could be ready within three years

Measures to avoid a hard border could be ready within three years, according to an independent commission chaired by senior members of the British Conservative party.

The group’s recommendations are aimed at using existing legal frameworks and technology to find alternatives to the controversial Irish backstop measure in Theresa May’s Brexit deal.

But critics said the proposals would be costly and would come too late for a deal to be reached by the current October 31 Brexit date.

The Alternative Arrangements Commission was set up by the Prosperity UK think tank.

A sign, erected by 'Border Communites Against Brexit', outside Newry, Co. Down (Brian Lawless/PA Wire)

Its interim report recommends:

- Investigating the possibility of creating special economic zones to cover the border.

- Creating a multi-tier trusted trader programme for large and medium-sized companies, with exemptions for the smallest firms.

- Using mobile units to carry out sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) checks - covering food safety and plant and animal health - away from the border.

- Drafting an alternative arrangements protocol which could be inserted into either the Withdrawal Agreement or used in any other Brexit outcome.

But Owen Smith, former shadow Northern Ireland secretary and a supporter of the People’s Vote campaign for a second referendum, said: “The idea of trying to replace the Northern Ireland backstop with so-called alternative arrangements has already been tested to destruction.

“There is no political will to do so from either Ireland, the rest of the EU or most importantly the people of Northern Ireland, particularly those living on or near the border.”

He said the commission was “a desperate attempt to make a square peg fit into a round hole in order to try and hold the warring factions of the Conservative Party together”.

Naomi Smith, head of the pro-EU Best for Britain campaign, said “a solution years down the line won’t cut it: we have a deadline of October 31 this year” and the proposals would “wrap the island of Ireland in red tape and bureaucracy - at a hefty cost to the British taxpayer”.

“A quicker, cheaper and more efficient option would be to stop Brexit,” she said.

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