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Cross-border crackdown on the way 12.07.11

by Jessie Magee

NEW regulations on cross-border traffic offences agreed at the European Parliament this week will be implemented by the Government here, according to a North West MEP.
Ireland is one of three countries, along with the UK and Denmark, to have opted out of the legislation until now. Other member states have been given two years to apply the new rules, which will mean that drivers who commit road offences abroad will no longer be able to evade prosecution when they return to their home country.
Speaking from Strasbourg, Fine Gael MEP Jim Higgins said he was very confident that the Transport Minister would sign up to the directive, hopefully before the Dáil breaks for the summer. He also explained that the reason Ireland is not on board yet is because the government was in flux when the decision was being taken in March of this year.
“Ireland was not present at the Council table on 2nd March because we were in political limbo, the previous government had been defeated even though they were still theoretically in power. I have contacted Transport Minister Leo Varadkar and I’m confident that the government will give it priority,” he said.
Under the new laws, EU states will swap car registration details to track down and penalise motorists who drink drive run red lights, don’t wear their seatbelts, or break the speed limit. Any fines or penalties will be based on the law of the state where the offence took place.
Mr Higgins said the law would help gardaí and the PSNI in border counties to crackdown on drivers from the North who “use the roads and motorways of the Republic as their playground”.
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