The Borneo Post (Sabah)

UK govt under pressure to publish Brexit papers

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LONDON: The British government came under pressure on Wednesday to publish papers detailing the potential impact of Brexit, after MPs appealed to a rare parliament­ary power.

The opposition Labour party tabled the ‘humble address' motion in which they called for the government to publish its assessment of 58 sectors, including tourism and nuclear.

London's Brexit department has so far refused to make their findings public, claiming that doing so could harm its negotiatin­g position as talks continue with Brussels on the UK's departure from the European Union.

La bo ur' s parliament­ary motion was approved unopposed by the ruling Conservati­ves on Wednesday evening.

The Speaker of the Commons, John Bercow, said such motions have“traditiona­lly been regarded as binding or effective” and suggested he expected a response from the government within days.

A spokeswoma­n for the Brexit department said they recognised that parliament “does have rights relating to the publicatio­n of documents”.

“Ministers also have a clear obligation not to disclose informatio­n when doing so would not be in the public interest. We will reflect on the implicatio­ns of the vote and respond in due course,” she said.

Labour MP Peter Kyle said it would ‘scandalous' if the government were to withhold the papers.

“It is time that they release these impact assessment­s in full so that parliament, and most importantl­y the public, can see for themselves what the impact of a hard Brexit will be on our economy and on people's jobs and businesses.

“Simply releasing redacted documents covered in black marker pen won't be good enough,” he said in a statement released by the pro-EU Open Britain campaign.

The opposition Liberal Democrats also warned the government that the impact statements must be published in their entirety.

“Ministers need to publish these reports in full, not subject them to a Whitehall whitewash.

“This has nothing do with Britain's negotiatin­g position, and everything to do with the government trying to spare its own blushes,” said party spokesman Tom Brake.

Britain returns to the negotiatin­g table next week, with talks in Brussels scheduled for Nov 9 and 10, the Brexit ministry said Wednesday. — AFP

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