China Daily (Hong Kong)

Brexit blame game turns into another predictabl­e stalemate

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BRUSSELS — Amid the blame game between the European Union and the United Kingdom, the third round of Brexit talks concluded on Thursday without decisive progress, as expected.

The UK’s Brexit Secretary David Davis left for Washington on Friday, insisting he was determined to be optimistic about Britain’s departure from the EU.

However, the EU’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier told a joint news conference that decisive progress on the key issues had yet to made.

“Over the course of this week we have made a number of useful clarificat­ion on a number of points, for instance, the status of border workers. However, we did not get any decisive progress on any of the principle subjects,” said Barnier.

“We made real progress on the question of the Common Travel Area, on the basis of guarantees by the United Kingdom, and we clarified, in a constructi­ve manner, what remains to be done, particular­ly with regards to NorthSouth cooperatio­n in the Good Friday Agreement.

Barnier stressed that time is passing quickly for the two sides to reach an agreement.

“At the current speed, we are far from being able to recommend to the European Council that there has been sufficient progress in order to start discussion­s on the future relationsh­ip, while we are finalizing the withdrawal agreement throughout 2018,” he said.

Unlike Barnier’s pessimism, Davis believed that the two sides have had long and detailed discussion­s across multiple areas this week and “I think it is fair to say, that we have seen some concrete progress” especially on citizens’ rights, he said.

Both sides have agreed to protect the rights of frontier workers, to cover future social security contributi­ons for those covered by the Withdrawal Agreement and protect existing healthcare rights and arrangemen­ts for EU27 citizens in Britain and British nationals in the EU, among others, said Davis.

“And we have had further discussion­s on the governance of the citizens’ rights agreement — and the wider withdrawal agreement. We have shown a willingnes­s to discuss creative solutions in this area and now is the time for the Commission to match it,” he said.

Davis, who will address the US Chamber of Commerce during his Washington visit, added: “I am a determined optimist. I fundamenta­lly believe that a good deal is in the interests of both the UK and the EU and the whole of the developed world.”

Saying the EU respects Britain’s decision to leave the single market and customs union, Barnier warned that the “EU’s capacity to regulate, to supervise, to enforce our laws, must not and will not be undermined by Brexit”.

“The European Council guidelines state that the union will preserve its autonomy of decision-making. The UK wants to take back control, it wants to adopt its own standards and regulation­s. But it also wants to have these standards recognized automatica­lly in the EU. That is what UK papers ask for,” Barnier said, calling this “simply impossible”.

However, we did not get any decisive progress on any of the principle subjects.” Michel Barnier,

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