Kuwait Times

Brexit trigger still fixed for end-March

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BRATISLAVA: Britain will still formally trigger its departure from the European Union by the end of March, the minister responsibl­e for managing “Brexit” said yesterday. David Davis’s comments, during a visit to Bratislava, came just two days after a vote by the House of Lords called that date into question. When asked by journalist­s about the date Davis said “Yes”, the conservati­ve government would be able to trigger Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon treaty by the end of this month. A two-year period of negotiatio­ns will follow.

The House of Lords, Britain’s unelected upper chamber of parliament, voted Wednesday to amend and thereby delay the bill that would allow Prime Minister Theresa May to begin Brexit negotiatio­ns. The Lords, where May’s Conservati­ve Party does not hold a majority, have demanded guarantees for EU nationals living in Britain, a matter that the premier had wanted to tackle later. The defeat means the bill must return to the lower House of Commons for deliberati­on, delaying final approval just weeks before the self-imposed deadline for starting Brexit negotiatio­ns.

At a joint press conference, Davis told Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico that the government wanted to preserve the rights of EU citizens now living in Britain. “For existing citizens in the UK, we want something that is very close to or identical to that of the rights of British citizens in terms of rights of residence, access to welfare,” Davis said. “But that is something that will have to be agreed between us, in the whole 28,” he added, referring to all EU member states.

Hundreds of thousands of EU citizens living and working in Britain, a majority from eastern states such as Slovakia and Poland, are demanding that their rights be protected. It is estimated that at least 1.2 million British citizens currently live and work in other EU member states. They, too, are lobbying to preserve their rights post-Brexit. —AFP

 ??  ?? BRATISLAVA: Britain’s Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, David Davis, left, and Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico, right, attend a press conference after their meeting in Bratislava yesterday. —AFP
BRATISLAVA: Britain’s Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union, David Davis, left, and Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico, right, attend a press conference after their meeting in Bratislava yesterday. —AFP

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