British-Irish conference: Brexit rights deal to be signed

Irish border Image copyright Getty Images

British and Irish ministers are to sign a deal to preserve the Common Travel Area after Brexit.

It guarantees free movement for citizens crossing the Irish border and cross-border access for study and health care.

It comes as NI's parties meet in an attempt to break the Stormont deadlock.

Northern Ireland has been without devolved government for more than two-and-a-half years, after the DUP and Sinn Féin split in a bitter row.

A memorandum of understanding, which is not legally binding, will be signed at a meeting of the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference on Wednesday.

The conference was scheduled by the two governments following last month's murder of Lyra McKee, and is part of efforts to restore power-sharing in Belfast.

On Tuesday, the governments set out details for a fresh talks process to take place over the next few weeks.

They held talks with the five main parties, the first since substantive negotiations collapsed last year.

Image caption Talks got under way at Stormont on Tuesday

Top of the agenda on Wednesday will be the signing of a memorandum of understanding preserving the Common Travel Area post Brexit.

The Common Travel Area (CTA) gives UK and Irish citizens certain reciprocal rights in each others' countries.

The rights include largely unrestricted travel between each jurisdiction.

It is an arrangement between the UK and Ireland which pre-dates their membership of the European Union.

The memorandum will be signed by Cabinet Minister David Liddington and Tanaiste (Deputy prime minister) Simon Coveney. Northern Ireland Secretary Karen Bradley will also be in attendance.

Analysis: Brexit threatened trust

By Enda McClafferty, BBC News NI Political Correspondent

It may have been in place for more than a century but in reality it was an agreement written in sand with no real legal weight.

The Common Travel Area and the rights which flowed from it for citizens crossing the border, survived because of an arrangement between London and Dublin built on trust.

Brexit threatened that trust and exposed the legal shortcoming in the arrangement.

Image copyright Reuters

On Wednesday, ministers will shore up the Common Travel Area in a Memorandum of Understanding which we are told will be Brexit-proof.

But, by definition, a Memorandum of Understanding is not a legally binding document but instead signals the intention of both sides to move forward with a contract.

So, what are the chances of the sands shifting?

The British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference was set up through the Good Friday peace agreement, signed in 1998.

It aims to promote bilateral co-operation between the British and Irish governments.

Until last summer, it had not met since 2007, but nationalist parties had urged the two governments to hold it, in the absence of a breakthrough at Stormont.

Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption The conference is due to take place in Westminster

Meanwhile, the first of five working groups set up to deal with outstanding issues at Stormont is also due to meet on Wednesday.

The rest will begin meeting over the course of this week.

The working groups are being chaired by current and former Stormont senior civil servants, with the political parties nominating three representatives to sit on each group.

A source involved in the process said they were "open-minded" about the new talks format, and that the "most crucial" groups were those dealing with reform of the petition of concern, and language and culture.

The governments have also announced that there will be weekly meetings of the five main parties with Mrs Bradley and Mr Coveney, to "take stock".

Prime Minister Theresa May and Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Leo Varadkar will review progress at the end of May.

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