The Phnom Penh Post

EU, UK each demand concession­s as post-Brexit talks stall

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BRITISH and EU negotiator­s had dug in their heels and were each demanding more concession­s from the other as post-Brexit trade talks dragged on into December 20, deadlocked on fishing rights.

Sources from both sides said that unless the other backed down on access to UK waters, Britain would leave the single market at midnight on December 31 without a follow-on deal on cross-Channel commerce.

A British government source said: “We’re continuing to try every possible path to an agreement, but without a substantia­l shift from the [European] Commission we will be leaving on WTO [ World Trade Organisati­on] terms on 31 December.”

But an EU diplomat said Brussels had made Britain its last offer on fishing and it was down now to UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson to decide whether he wants a deal.

“If Britain doesn’t accept the latest EU offer it will be a ‘no deal’ over fish,” he warned. A European official said: “It’s very blocked.”

The tough talk came as both sides are engaged in intense – and tense – negotiatio­ns to secure a pact before the end of the month. No deal would risk

chaos at EU and UK borders, where a pre-deadline rush has already caused long tailbacks of lorries.

Observers, however, noted that the fishing issue was about finding middle ground between offer and counteroff­er in an economical­ly small sector, while the much bigger other main issue, on guaran

teeing fair trade competitio­n rules is closer to settlement.

The European diplomat said: “It’s all down to numbers now.”

The EU’s pointman in the negotiatio­ns, Michel Barnier, has proposed EU fishermen giving up nearly a quarter of the value of the fish they currently catch in UK waters. Britain is understood to be hold

ing out for getting back much more than half.

The UK has suggested this compromise last for three years before it is renegotiat­ed, whereas Europe is holding out for double that.

“We cannot accept a deal that doesn’t leave us in control of our own laws or waters,” the UK government source said, arguing that the EU was “continuing to make demands that are incompatib­le with our independen­ce”.

EU fishermen fear losing any access to the rich UK fishing waters will threaten their livelihood­s.

“We are in the throes of being sold down the river,” the European Fisheries Alliance said in a statement, urging Barnier to stick to protecting them.

“The shape of a deal, as currently stands would give a huge blow to the European seafood sector which is made up of more than 18,000 fishermen and 3,500 vessels with an annual turnover of € 20.7 billion [$25.4 billion],” it said.

Time is very short to reach an accord.

The European Parliament has highlighte­d a deadline of midnight (2300 GMT) on December 20 to receive a deal for review if its members are to ratify it before the end of the year.

Their UK parliament­ar y counterpar­ts are in recess, but can be recalled within 48 hours to do likewise.

But EU capitals are not binding themselves to the European Parliament’s deadline.

France’s European affairs minister, Clement Beaune, said talks will not be called to a halt if they drag out past December 20 night.

He said: “We won’t do that because what is at risk is whole sectors like fishing, like sustainabl­e competitio­n conditions for our businesses.”

The urgency of reaching a deal is seen in long lines of trucks at the freight rail link through the Channel tunnel as British companies franticall­y stockpile.

A group of UK members of Parliament warned on December 19 that Britain has not installed the complex informatio­n technology (IT ) systems and port infrastruc­ture needed to ensure trade with the EU runs smoothly.

Some disruption is inevitable, deal or no deal, with British and European firms needing to fill out import-export, health and tax forms to send and receive goods to each other.

A deal would avoid tariffs but there would still be traffic snarls as checks on truck loads and drivers’ papers are carried out.

Even truck drivers’ lunches will come under border scrutiny – the British government warned that packed ham and cheese sandwiches are banned from entry into Europe under meat and dairy restrictio­ns that apply to non-EU arrivals.

 ?? AFP ?? Sources from both sides have said that unless the other backed down on access to UK waters, Britain would leave the single market at midnight on December 31 without a follow-on deal on cross-Channel commerce.
AFP Sources from both sides have said that unless the other backed down on access to UK waters, Britain would leave the single market at midnight on December 31 without a follow-on deal on cross-Channel commerce.

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