Belfast Telegraph

Agreement to preserve common travel area ‘almost ready to sign’

- BY MICHAEL McHUGH

AN agreement ensuring freedom of movement between the UK and Ireland for British and Irish citizens after Brexit is almost ready to sign, a British diplomat has said.

British ambassador to Ireland Robin Barnett (right) said London and Dublin had worked “intensivel­y” on measures to ensure the continuati­on of the Common Travel Area (CTA), which precedes Britain’s EU membership and allows citizens of both countries to live and work freely in either.

The ambassador wrote in a public letter: “I would like to reassure you that the UK and Irish Government­s have worked intensivel­y on measures to ensure the continuati­on of the CTA.

“We have an agreement which is almost ready to sign.

“This work reflects the fact that, right from the start of the EU exit process, and throughout the negotiatio­ns, the Prime Minister has been clear that maintainin­g the UK and Ireland’s CTA is a top priority for the UK.”

Mr Barnett said the EU had fully accepted that the CTA, a bilateral arrangemen­t, will continue whatever the final outcome of the negotiatio­ns.

“I can assure all British citizens living in Ireland and all Irish citizens in the UK: you don’t need to take any action to protect your status under the CTA, or the rights associated with it,” he added.

“The UK has taken steps to ensure legal certainty of the status of Irish citizens in the UK, and to provide clarity for them.”

The CTA is a long-standing arrangemen­t between the UK, the Crown Dependenci­es (Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man) and Ireland that has its origins in the 1920s, before the UK or Ireland joined the EU.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland