Mercury (Hobart)

You are in or out: UK told

- London

THE leaders of Britain and France met yesterday against a military backdrop to pledge closer co-operation on defence, security and borders after Britain leaves the European Union.

But President Emmanuel Macron also delivered a firm message: the UK cannot keep coveted access to the EU for its financial sector after Brexit unless it continues to play by the bloc’s rules once it leaves.

“The choice is on the British side, not on my side,” Macron said at a joint news conference with British Prime Minister Theresa May.

“If you want access to the single market — including the financial services — be my guest,” he said. “But it means that you need to contribute to the budget and acknowledg­e European jurisdicti­on.”

The future of Britain’s financial sector — which employs more than 1 million people — is a key issue as Britain and the EU hammer out details of their relationsh­ip after Brexit.

EU officials warn the UK it can’t hang on to the benefits of membership without accepting its responsibi­lities, including free movement of people.

May said Britain would be leaving the single market, but wanted a free-trade deal with the bloc covering both goods and services.

She said London would continue to be a major global financial centre after Brexit.

The visit, Macron’s first to Britain since he won the French presidency in May 2017, was aimed at strengthen­ing security and intelligen­ce ties between nations that are both neighbours and historic rivals, and building goodwill as Britain negotiates its exit from the EU.

The venue — the Sandhurst military academy southwest of London — was selected as a signal that the relationsh­ip between Western Europe’s two biggest military powers won’t be weakened once the UK leaves the EU in March 2019.

Senior ministers from the two countries attended the one-day meeting, and signed agreements on everything from space exploratio­n to tackling online extremism.

In a significan­t gesture, May offered millions to ease French annoyance over a 2003 deal that placed British border controls in the northern French port of Calais. The town has become a magnet for migrants hoping to reach Britain, and the accord puts the burden of blocking their entry to the UK on France.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia