nb this means that Ireland will participate in criminal law aspects, NOT immigration aspects, of Schengen 1/
2/ This is very similar to the UK's partial participation in Schengen - which will finish at the end of the transition period, ie at the same moment when Irish partial participation *starts*.
The author of this tweet is being misleading, in order to defend his or her previous lie. The current tariff on soya sauce from Japan is zero, due to the EU/Japan FTA which the UK applies until the end of the year. The UK and Japan do not currently trade on WTO terms.
As @ColinYeo1 has pointed out foreign national offenders from an EU country are nothing to do with the asylum system. But I'll add that since @ukhomeoffice officials surely know this, the authors of this tweet are therefore brazen liars who are unfit for public service.
I have emailed the permanent secretary to the Home Office to this end: "Frankly, I find it hard to see how this behaviour is consistent with the civil service code - in particular the requirements of integrity and honesty."
Judgment in @privacyint and French and Belgian cases: mass data retention is illegal in principle, but can be justified on national security grounds if temporary and subject to safeguards
EU courts have jurisdiction to rule on damages if EU foreign policy sanctions were illegal; but a breach of the obligation to provide adequate reasons does not give rise to damages liability