Brexit Bill will set a 'disastrous precedent' and undermine the union, warn UK Church leaders

 (Photo: Unsplash/A Perry)

Church leaders from the four nations of the UK have warned that the Internal Market Bill risks creating a "disastrous precedent" if it is passed in its current form. 

The warning comes from the Archbishops of Canterbury and York, the Archbishop of Armagh and the Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church in a rare joint intervention published in the Financial Times ahead of the second reading of the Internal Market Bill in the House of Lords this week. 

The Bill sets out the rules for trade between England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland after the Brexit transition period ends in January.

The details of the Bill have stoked controversy after Northern Ireland Secretary and former Brexit legal adviser Brandon Lewis said last month that the Bill allows the Government to break international law in a "very specific and limited way".

The four Anglican primates this would have "enormous moral, as well as political and legal, consequences" and compromise the union and the Good Friday Agreement.

"We believe this would create a disastrous precedent. It is particularly disturbing for all of us who feel a sense of duty and responsibility to the Good Friday (Belfast) Agreement — that international treaty on which peace and stability within and between the UK and Ireland depends," they said.

They continue: "If carefully negotiated terms are not honoured and laws can be 'legally' broken, on what foundations does our democracy stand?

"We urge lawmakers to consider this bill in the light of values and principles we would wish to characterise relationships across these islands long after the transition period." 

News
Church leaders call for peace at Easter
Church leaders call for peace at Easter

Church leaders have used their Easter messages to appeal for peace in the world. 

How a chance encounter led to an Easter song
How a chance encounter led to an Easter song

At Easter one of the lesser-known songs is “Wounded for Me”. It has an interesting backstory …

Fear and silence grip Colombian hamlet after eight Christians vanish
Fear and silence grip Colombian hamlet after eight Christians vanish

A Colombian hamlet is gripped by fear following the forced disappearance of eight residents - seven of them Protestant church leaders and members - after responding to orders issued by a guerrilla group earlier this month.

A decade of bloodshed: NGO report reveals more than 20,000 Christians slain in south-east Nigeria
A decade of bloodshed: NGO report reveals more than 20,000 Christians slain in south-east Nigeria

More than 20,000 Christians have reportedly been brutally killed over the past decade across south-east Nigeria, according to a disturbing report by the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety), a Catholic-inspired human rights organisation.