Arab Times

EU & UK find will to get Brexit deal

Promising signals

-

BRUSSELS, Oct 12, (Agencies): The European Union said Friday that talks with the UK to find an amicable divorce deal were back on track, despite huge challenges and a looming end-of-month deadline for Britain to leave the bloc.

EU Council President Donald Tusk said he has “received promising signals” from Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar that a Brexit deal is still possible, so he has extended a deadline to continue the Brexit talks.

Tusk, speaking in Nicosia, said “for the first time” Varadkar and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson saw a pathway toward a deal, adding that “even the slightest chance must be used” to avoid a no-deal Brexit.

Immediatel­y, the wheels of the negotiatin­g machinery started churning again. Johnson’s Brexit Secretary, Stephen Barclay, got a warm welcome from EU negotiator Michel Barnier before they started almost two hours of talks around breakfast.

“If there is a will, there is, of course, a way. Otherwise people would not be working on this,” said EU Commission spokeswoma­n Mina Andreeva.

Originally, Tusk said he was planning to pull the plug Friday on the Brexit talks, but because of the breakthrou­gh he can now see talks going through the weekend, ahead of the EU’s two-day summit, which starts next Thursday.

Johnson

Success

Tusk said “there is no guarantee of success and the time is practicall­y up” but insisted both sides should use every opportunit­y available ahead of Britain’s scheduled Oct 31 departure date.

“A no-deal Brexit will never be the choice of the EU,” Tusk said.

Johnson said late Thursday there was a “pathway” to a belated agreement to stave off a chaotic, costly no-deal Brexit on Oct. 31, while Varadkar said the meeting was “very positive.”

After meeting with Barclay, Barnier said it was essential to keep focus.

“Brexit is like climbing a mountain. We need vigilance, determinat­ion and patience,” said the man who once organized the 1992 Winter Olympics in his Savoie region of France.

The main stumbling block remains how to handle the UK’s only land border with the EU, which is on the border between Northern Ireland and Ireland.

The challenge of keeping this border invisible – something that has underpinne­d both the local economy and the region’s peace deal - has dominated Brexit discussion­s for three years, ever since UK voters chose in 2016 to leave the EU.

Insisted

Tusk insisted “even the slightest chance must be used” to avoid an acrimoniou­s split since both the EU and the UK would be hit hard economical­ly.

One way to do that could be to extend the Oct 31 deadline so that negotiator­s have more time to work things out in legally-binding detail. But Johnson has insisted that Britain is leaving on Oct. 31 “do or die” - with or without a divorce deal.

France has also long said that deadlines cannot be extended forever, since Britain was originally slated to leave the bloc on March 31.

In Paris, France’s European affairs minister, Amelie de Montchalin, had another take on the debate, saying that a no-deal Brexit “is probable, at this stage.”

De Montchalin told France Inter radio that she does not see an obvious reason to grant a further extension to the UK

“I have a fundamenta­l question: why give more time. If it is time for the sake of time? It has taken one year, even three years, and we don’t really get it,” she said.

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn on Thursday promised Britain a radical new political agenda and accuse Prime Minister Boris Johnson of dragging Queen Elizabeth into the country’s looming general election.

Britain is trapped in an acute political crisis over voters’ 2016 decision to leave the European Union. Johnson’s government has no majority in parliament, no agreed plan for leaving the bloc, and only three weeks until the exit deadline.

Both the ruling Conservati­ves and Labour want an early election, but Corbyn says he will not agree to one until Johnson has ruled out the possibilit­y that Britain leaves the EU without a deal.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait