London: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday insisted that his new Brexit plan would 'in no circumstances' result in checks at or near the border of Northern Ireland - though he did not define 'near'.
"Today PM @BorisJohnson has set out a fair and reasonable compromise for replacing the backstop so we can get Brexit done by 31 October," 10 Downing Street, the residence of the British Prime Miniter, tweeted.
The new plan contains alternatives to the contentious Irish backstop issue, which Johnson describes as a 'bridge to nowhere', and involves a customs union between the United Kingdom and the bloc in order to avoid a hard Irish border, media reported.
Addressing the Conservative Party conference on Wednesday, the Prime Minister said, "We will under no circumstances have checks at or near the border in Northern Ireland. We will respect the peace process and the Good Friday agreement," he said, referring to a 1998 deal that ended 'decades of violence'.