Johnson hails Britain's 'indestructible' relationship with US
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[LONDON] British Prime Minister Boris Johnson hailed the UK-US relationship as "indestructible" after his first meeting with President Joe Biden ahead of the G-7 leaders' summit which opens on Friday.
"It's a relationship, you can call it the 'deep and meaningful relationship', whatever you want, the 'indestructible relationship'," Mr Johnson said in a BBC interview broadcast on Friday morning.
"It's a relationship that has endured for a very long time, and has been an important part of peace and prosperity both in Europe and around the world."
During their face-to-face meeting on Thursday, the two leaders discussed "about 25 subjects in some detail", including the Brexit-induced disruption in Northern Ireland, he said.
Mr Johnson played down the displeasure of Mr Biden, who is proud of his Irish origins, over London's attempts to reverse the "Northern Ireland Protocol" which seeks to avoid the return of a border with EU member Ireland but which has disrupted trade between the mainland Britain and Northern Ireland.
"Everybody has a massive interest in making sure that we keep the essential symmetry of the Good Friday Agreement," which ended three decades of conflict in the British-ruled province.
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"I think we can sort it out," he said.
In his meeting with Mr Biden, Johnson said he also raised the case of British teenager Harry Dunn, who was killed in a road accident caused by the wife of an American diplomat. She quickly left Britain for the United States after the accident, claiming diplomatic immunity.
Mr Biden was "actively engaged in the case", Mr Johnson said.
"As you know, he has his own personal reasons for feeling very deeply about the issue," he said, referring to Mr Biden losing his first wife and one-year-old daughter in a car accident in 1972.
According to Mr Johnson, the difficulty in the case "is that there are limits to what the executive can do with the legal, with the judiciary and the legal system, but both sides are working together."
AFP
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