Iran Daily

May pleads for ‘urgent’ post-brexit EU security deal

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British Prime Minister Theresa May pleaded Saturday for an urgent deal with the European Union on post-brexit security cooperatio­n, warning that citizens’ lives were at stake.

In a speech at the Munich Security Conference, she acknowledg­ed that no deal currently exists between the EU and a third country “that captures the full depth and breadth of our existing relationsh­ip”, AFP reported.

But she said there was no reason both sides could not come up with practical ways to create a “deep and special partnershi­p” on security.

“We cannot delay discussion­s on this,” May said.

She also warned European partners not to put politics above cooperatio­n against crime and terrorism.

“This cannot be a time when any of us allow competitio­n between partners, rigid institutio­nal restrictio­ns or deep-seated ideology to inhibit our cooperatio­n and jeopardize the security of our citizens,” May told an audience that included European Commission chief Jean-claude Juncker.

The premier warned that if there was no deal on security by the time Britain leaves the bloc in March 2019, speedy extraditio­ns under the European Arrest Warrant “would cease”.

And if the UK were no longer part of Europol, the EU’S law enforcemen­t agency, informatio­n sharing would be hampered – underminin­g the fight against terrorism, organized crime and cyberattac­ks.

“This would damage us both and put all our citizens at greater risk,” May warned, urging European leaders to show “some real creativity and ambition” in coming up with a bespoke UK-EU security pact.

“We must now move with urgency to put in place the treaty to protect all European citizens wherever they are in Europe,” May said.

Some experts have warned that cooperatio­n on police and security matters could be limited by Britain’s refusal to accept the jurisdicti­on of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) after Brexit.

May appeared to respond to those concerns by saying that the UK would “respect the remit” of the ECJ when working with EU agencies, in return for “respect for our unique status as a third country”.

“But as a country outside the European Union, we will have our own sovereign legal order, so the European Court of Justice will no longer have jurisdicti­on in the United Kingdom.”

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