The Phnom Penh Post

EU warns Britain to ‘start negotiatin­g seriously’

- Bryan McManus

THE EU told Britain bluntly on Monday that it had to get serious about Brexit negotiatio­ns and address separation issues first before the talks about its future relationsh­ip with the bloc.

The European Union says there has to be “sufficient progress” in three key areas – EU citizen rights, Northern Ireland’s border and the exit bill – before it will turn to post-Brexit arrangemen­ts, possibly starting in October.

Chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier initially exchanged pleasantri­es with his British counterpar­t David Davis but swiftly changed tone to demand London come up with detailed responses to Brussels’s positions.

“To be honest, I am concerned, time passes quickly,” Barnier told reporters ahead of a third round of talks in Brussels. “We welcome the [recent] UK government papers and we have read them very carefully . . . but we must start negotiatin­g seriously. We need UK papers that are clear. The sooner we remove the ambiguity the sooner we will be in a position to discuss the future relationsh­ip.”

For his part, Davis read a statement issued earlier on Monday in which he said Britain had been working hard on its position papers.

Without replying directly to Barnier’s comments, Davis said the British documents were “products of the hard work and detailed thinking that has been going on behind the scenes not just the last few weeks but the last 12 months”.

“They should form the basis of what I hope will be a constructi­ve week of talks between the European Commission and the UK,” he said.

Progress will require “flexibilit­y and imaginatio­n from both sides”, he said, adding: “We’re ready to roll up our sleeves and get down to work again once more.”

London says the EU’s insistence on the sequencing – the divorce settlement then future trade and political ties – may be counterpro­ductive.

If the two strands were negotiated in parallel, it might actually help resolve other sticky issues such as the future EU-UK border between Northern Ireland and the Republic, it says.

Last week, EU officials rejected any such connection, downplayin­g expectatio­ns that a “very big gap” could be bridged by the time Barnier and Davis address the press again on Thursday.

Both sides have repeatedly warned that the clock is ticking down to the March 2019 Brexit deadline and that they are the ones doing their best to make progress.

The talks are taking place against a backdrop of political uncertaint­y in Britain, with the opposition Labour Party over the weekend backing a “soft” Brexit whereby the country remains in the EU’s customs union and single market for a transition period.

Prime Minister Theresa May has said she wants Britain unequivoca­lly out of both, but her position has been crippled since a June election gamble backfired and she lost her parliament­ary majority.

May remains in office thanks to a deal with Northern Ireland’s ultraconse­rvative Democratic Unionist Party, which views the Republic, an EU member, with deep suspicion.

In another position paper, Britain said the European Court of Justice could continue to have an indirect influence, softening its position that the EU’s top court would not have any say in the country at all. But again this is not enough, EU officials said.

The rights of more than 3 million EU citizens in Britain and 1 million Britons in Europe arose from EU law, and so remain the remit of the ECJ.

“There is no other possibilit­y,” one official said.

 ?? EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP ?? EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier has warned Britain as London and Brussels kicked off a third round of tense Brexit talks.
EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier has warned Britain as London and Brussels kicked off a third round of tense Brexit talks.

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