Kuwait Times

Spain threatens Brexit-EU deal

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BRUSSELS: Spain’s demand for a veto on the future of Gibraltar loomed yesterday as the final stumbling block standing in the way of a smooth Brexit deal, as Theresa May headed to Brussels for 11th-hour talks. The British premier plans to meet EU leaders Jean-Claude Juncker and Donald Tusk, even though European diplomats insist the agreement is finished and ready for EU leaders to approve today.

But Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has warned that he will boycott today’s summit if London and Brussels do not confirm his country’s veto over any future accord on ties with Gibraltar. If there is no final agreement on both Britain’s withdrawal treaty and a political declaratio­n on post-Brexit EU-UK ties, Tusk may be forced to cancel the summit and plunge the process back into doubt. This would undermine May’s bid to sell her draft Brexit deal to a hostile Westminste­r parliament and increase the risk of a “no-deal Brexit” most observers warn would be an economic calamity.

Nothing in the painful 17-month withdrawal process has gone smoothly, and on Friday,

Sanchez insisted that Madrid holds a veto over the fate of Gibraltar in any post-Brexit negotiatio­n of new EU-UK ties. Visiting Cuba, Sanchez said Spain must negotiate directly with London on Gibraltar and approve any changes to its relationsh­ip to the European Union in a future agreement between Britain and Brussels. “If there’s no agreement, it’s very clear what will happen, there very probably won’t be a European Council,” he declared, referring to today’s summit of 27 EU leaders ahead of their encounter with May.

Gibraltar, a rocky outcrop home to a port and around 30,000 people, is a British territory claimed by Spain and a bone of contention as London negotiates a new relationsh­ip with Brussels after Brexit on March 29. In London, a Downing Street source insisted: “We have negotiated on behalf of the whole of the UK family. That includes Gibraltar and the overseas territorie­s.” In legal terms, Spain’s disapprova­l would not halt the divorce settlement, but it would embarrass EU leaders keen to show that the 27 are united, and might delay today’s largely symbolic summit.

More uncertaint­y

And, as Madrid has noted, any final relationsh­ip negotiated between London and Brussels after Brexit day on March 29 would have to be approved by all remaining member states-giving Spain a de facto veto further down the line. May

is due in Brussels later on to see EU Commission president Juncker, head of the bloc’s executive, and EU Council president Tusk, whose institutio­n represents the member states.

But European diplomats said no more substantiv­e negotiatio­ns are planned for this weekend and it was hoped today’s summit would simply see leaders sign off on the fruit of 17 months of dialogue. A European source said the meeting’s minutes would include language stressing the importance of Britain maintainin­g a level playing field for business during the 21-month post-Brexit transition. And the summit will give the European Council the lead over the Commission in negotiatin­g future ties-in part to reassure Madrid that its voice will be heard before any final settlement. After that, May will still have to sell the deal to the British parliament, an even greater political challenge.

May has refused to say whether she would resign if parliament eventually votes down the divorce agreement, but the political temperatur­e in Westminste­r has reached boiling point. “If we were to leave the EU without a deal, I have no doubt that the consequenc­es for the UK economy would be very serious indeed,” British finance minister Philip Hammond warned yesterday. “This deal will be done tomorrow and then it is our job to present it to the British people, to members of parliament and to make the case, in the national interest, for supporting this deal,” he told the BBC. —AFP

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