Arab Times

Big gap ahead of talks

London holds up progress: EU

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BRUSSELS, Aug 26, (AFP): Britain and the EU are very far apart on the main issues just days ahead of fresh Brexit talks, EU officials said Friday, blaming London’s “lack of substance” for holding up progress.

The two sides will hold a third round of talks starting Monday, said EU officials. EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier will lead the Brussels team, with David Davis leading the British delegation.

The EU insists there has to be “sufficient progress” in three key areas — EU citizen rights, Northern Ireland’s border and the exit bill — before considerin­g London’s demand for talks on its future trade relationsh­ip with the bloc.

“If you look where we are and where we need to be ... it is a very big gap. It is unlikely that we will make major steps to close this gap” next week, one of the EU officials told a press briefing.

“It is not the lack of time that is preventing us from advancing, so far it has been the lack of substance,” added the official who asked not to be named.

The EU officials stressed repeatedly that the 27 other bloc member states had agreed on the sequencing of the talks and despite London pressing to get the future relationsh­ip on the table, that was a no-go for the moment.

Trade

After the last round in July, Barnier warned Britain it had to clarify its position on the initial separation issues if there was to be the “sufficient progress” required to turn to trade in October.

London has published several position papers in the past few weeks but the EU officials appeared not to be overly impressed.

On the future of Northern Ireland and its border with the Republic of Ireland, London suggested technologi­cal solutions could avoid it becoming a barrier to both trade and the peace

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“We see a lot of magical thinking about how an invisible border could work in the future,” one of the officials said, urging London to really take on board just how big an impact Brexit will have on Ireland’s economy and society.

The official rejected British suggestion­s that agreeing a trade deal now would help resolve the issue and warned: “We think that the peace process must not become a bargaining chip in these negotiatio­ns.”

In another position paper, Britain said there might be room for the European Court of Justice to have an indirect influence, apparently softening its position that the EU’s top court would have any future say at all.

But again this would not be good enough, the official said.

The rights of more than three million EU citizens in Britain and one million Britons in Europe arose from EU law and therefore come under the remit of the ECJ, they said.

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