Dubai Telegraph - UK govt expected to call N.Ireland poll after deadline expires

EUR -
AED 4.31535
AFN 76.958122
ALL 96.135825
AMD 448.455966
ANG 2.103536
AOA 1077.378817
ARS 1689.793205
AUD 1.769793
AWG 2.117748
AZN 1.999166
BAM 1.955226
BBD 2.365605
BDT 143.537854
BGN 1.956488
BHD 0.44287
BIF 3484.738642
BMD 1.174895
BND 1.514255
BOB 8.145608
BRL 6.368522
BSD 1.174555
BTN 106.525722
BWP 15.512313
BYN 3.434891
BYR 23027.942478
BZD 2.362206
CAD 1.618359
CDF 2643.513731
CHF 0.93588
CLF 0.027383
CLP 1074.241633
CNY 8.279779
CNH 8.275714
COP 4492.798573
CRC 587.527489
CUC 1.174895
CUP 31.134718
CVE 110.677695
CZK 24.328728
DJF 208.802423
DKK 7.469753
DOP 74.42939
DZD 152.341544
EGP 55.73229
ERN 17.623425
ETB 182.167767
FJD 2.678173
FKP 0.879113
GBP 0.878628
GEL 3.166317
GGP 0.879113
GHS 13.517149
GIP 0.879113
GMD 86.355491
GNF 10209.837973
GTQ 8.997358
GYD 245.72994
HKD 9.143615
HNL 30.793726
HRK 7.534487
HTG 153.894813
HUF 384.504382
IDR 19563.177051
ILS 3.774762
IMP 0.879113
INR 106.634353
IQD 1539.112482
IRR 49474.829125
ISK 148.200678
JEP 0.879113
JMD 187.704886
JOD 0.832976
JPY 182.408915
KES 151.455816
KGS 102.744096
KHR 4704.280045
KMF 493.456553
KPW 1057.405154
KRW 1725.438512
KWD 0.360493
KYD 0.978804
KZT 605.802123
LAK 25454.101165
LBP 104388.194636
LKR 363.173364
LRD 208.249826
LSL 19.749811
LTL 3.46916
LVL 0.710682
LYD 6.367607
MAD 10.788474
MDL 19.82601
MGA 5298.776239
MKD 61.546096
MMK 2466.417042
MNT 4166.019472
MOP 9.415516
MRU 46.702262
MUR 53.986902
MVR 18.094973
MWK 2040.79287
MXN 21.126657
MYR 4.808255
MZN 75.078972
NAD 19.750453
NGN 1706.523037
NIO 43.107386
NOK 11.929878
NPR 170.440955
NZD 2.031305
OMR 0.451748
PAB 1.174555
PEN 3.961156
PGK 4.997122
PHP 69.167244
PKR 329.264518
PLN 4.21916
PYG 7888.683705
QAR 4.277751
RON 5.091173
RSD 117.363799
RUB 93.404607
RWF 1705.947575
SAR 4.408375
SBD 9.587196
SCR 17.055678
SDG 706.697189
SEK 10.917008
SGD 1.515578
SHP 0.881476
SLE 26.846223
SLL 24636.965519
SOS 671.452326
SRD 45.362794
STD 24317.954901
STN 24.907775
SVC 10.276982
SYP 12990.440464
SZL 19.750291
THB 37.003904
TJS 10.800021
TMT 4.112133
TND 3.420706
TOP 2.828866
TRY 50.162125
TTD 7.971659
TWD 36.832134
TZS 2916.675247
UAH 49.646123
UGX 4183.77155
USD 1.174895
UYU 46.026486
UZS 14245.602311
VES 314.213632
VND 30923.237041
VUV 142.312254
WST 3.260901
XAF 655.764453
XAG 0.018365
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.175213
XCG 2.116778
XDR 0.817013
XOF 656.177917
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.153995
ZAR 19.745521
ZMK 10575.460835
ZMW 27.220008
ZWL 378.315718
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -1.1800

    75.33

    -1.57%

  • JRI

    -0.0065

    13.56

    -0.05%

  • GSK

    0.4300

    49.24

    +0.87%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    75.82

    +0.21%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.3

    0%

  • BTI

    0.6400

    57.74

    +1.11%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    23.365

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    1.1000

    76.03

    +1.45%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    35.25

    -0.03%

  • RBGPF

    -3.4900

    77.68

    -4.49%

  • BCE

    0.2161

    23.61

    +0.92%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    14.9

    +2.01%

  • AZN

    1.7300

    91.56

    +1.89%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    12.7

    +0.87%

  • RELX

    0.7000

    41.08

    +1.7%

UK govt expected to call N.Ireland poll after deadline expires
UK govt expected to call N.Ireland poll after deadline expires / Photo: PETER MUHLY - AFP

UK govt expected to call N.Ireland poll after deadline expires

The UK government was on Friday expected to call the second election in a year in Northern Ireland after politicians failed to resolve a standoff over post-Brexit trade rules.

Text size:

A deadline to resume power-sharing in Northern Ireland's regional government passed at midnight on Friday.

British environment minister Therese Coffey said that meant an election would now "definitely happen".

Jeffrey Donaldson, leader of the pro-UK Democratic Unionist Party, defended his party's blocking of the restoration of power-sharing as part of its protest against the so-called Northern Ireland Protocol governing post-Brexit trade rules.

He said his party could not "nominate ministers to an executive that is required to impose a protocol that harms our economy, harms our people and prevents us getting access to medicines and other vital supplies from the rest of the United Kingdom".

He said he stood "ready to form an executive as soon as that solution is found" but that they had been waiting for nearly three years and "we need a solution".

The expiration of the legal cut-off point for the creation of a joint executive between pro-Ireland nationalists and pro-UK unionists came after parties made a last-ditch attempt to restart Northern Ireland's devolved assembly.

In an argumentative Thursday session, lawmakers briefly reconvened for the first time in months for a special sitting but failed to elect a speaker needed to form a new executive.

The DUP has boycotted the assembly since February, calling for the protocol to be overhauled or scrapped entirely.

Donaldson told reporters Thursday the party would not vote for a new speaker because insufficient action had been taken to address their demands since they collapsed the executive.

"We need to remove the rubble of the protocol that has undermined our economy, that has inhibited our ability to trade within our own country," he said ahead of the failed vote.

- 'Perpetual standoff' -

New British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak had implored the parties to "get back to Stormont", arguing that people there "deserve a fully functioning and locally elected executive", his official spokesman said.

Chris Heaton-Harris, Britain's Northern Ireland minister and an arch-Eurosceptic, has said repeatedly that if the deadline expired he would not hesitate to call an election on Friday, with December 15 the expected date for the new poll.

Northern Ireland has now been without a functioning government for nine months, with pro-Irish party Sinn Fein winning a historic first election in May which is seen as further complicating the political situation.

Sinn Fein leader Michelle O'Neill -- who was set to become first minister if the executive was restarted -- condemned the DUP's "perpetual standoff with the public, the majority of whom they do not speak for or indeed represent".

- Delicate balance of peace -

The DUP insists the protocol -- agreed by London and Brussels as part of Britain's 2019 Brexit deal -- must be addressed first.

It claims the pact, which effectively keeps Northern Ireland in the European Union's single market and customs union, weakens the province's place within the United Kingdom.

Many unionists also argue it is threatening the delicate balance of peace between the pro-Irish nationalist community and those in favour of continued union with Britain.

The protocol was agreed to avoid the return of a hard land border with the Republic of Ireland, which remains an EU member.

Eliminating that hard border was a key strand of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, which ended three decades of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland.

Britain's Conservative government, which has had three prime ministers in two months, has urged Brussels to agree to wholesale revisions of the protocol.

London is also in the midst of passing contentious legislation to override it unilaterally.

That has sparked fears of a trade war and worsening relations with Europe when the economic landscape is already gloomy.

W.Darwish--DT