Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Europe unveils Brexit transition punishment plan

- Agence FrancePres­se letters@hindustant­imes.com

BRUSSELS: BRITAIN DID NOT SAY WHETHER IT WOULD ACCEPT THE PROPOSAL, OR IF IT HAD COME UP WITH CONTINGENC­Y PLANS IF BRITAIN IS BLOCKED FROM THE SINGLE MARKET.

The EU unveiled plans on Wednesday to curb to Britain’s access to the bloc’s single market if it breaks the rules of the postBrexit transition period, in what critics dismissed as “silly threats”.

The draft transition agreement also says that Britain must avoid any actions that are “likely to be prejudicia­l” to the European Union’s interests during the nearly-two year phase from March 2019.

Britain and the EU began talks this week on the transition, in which London must follow all EU laws without having any decision-making powers, in exchange for frictionle­ss access to the single market.

But the EU’s draft, in a footnote to the five-page document, calls for the ability to sanction Britain in cases where it would take too long to refer a breach of the transition rules to the EU’s top court.

That could include reimposing tariffs or customs checks, both of which Britain is supposed to be free of as a member of the EU internal market during the transition to December 2020.

“The withdrawal agreement should provide for a mechanism allowing the Union to suspend certain benefits deriving for the United Kingdom from participat­ion in the internal market where it considers that referring the matter to the Court of Justice of the European Union would not bring in appropriat­e time the necessary remedies,” it says.

Pro-Brexit lawmakers were quick to jump on the plans, saying it would be “utterly perverse” of the EU to impose tariffs on British goods when the two economies are so closely aligned.

“This is an indication of how fearful the EU is that they have to make these silly threats,” senior lawmaker Bernard Jenkin, from Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve Party, told BBC radio. “Of course we are going to do rather well outside the EU and we are going to show the EU up as a rather less successful organisati­on than it is.”

Conservati­ve MP Jacob ReesMogg, billed as a possible leadership rival to May, said the British government would find it “very difficult” to agree with.

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