The Borneo Post

PM: UK will have ‘control over borders’ after Brexit

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LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May insisted on Sunday that Britain will have ‘control over our borders’ after Brexit, suggesting she would be prepared to quit Europe’s trading zone to achieve it.

“The referendum vote was a vote for us to... bring control into our immigratio­n system. I’m clear that is part of what we need to deliver. We will be able to have control over our borders, of our laws,” she told Sky News in an interview.

German leader Angela Merkel has warned Britain will not be able to remain in the EU’s single market while ‘cherry picking’ the terms – including over the free movement of labour. May on Sunday appeared to suggest she would be willing to quit the trade zone.

“Often people talk in terms of, somehow we’re leaving the EU but we still want to keep bits of membership of the EU,” she said.

“We’re leaving, we’re coming out, we’re not going to be a member of the EU any longer.” Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon on Sunday said the prospect of a second independen­ce referendum for her nation was not mere bluster if Britain left the single market.

“They will be making a big mistake if they think I am in any way bluffing,” she told BBC’s Andrew Marr show.

The vote would “give Scotland the opportunit­y to decide whether it wants to be driven off a hard Brexit cliff by right-wing Tory Brexiteers or whether it wants to take control of its own future,” she added.

Experts say a so- called ‘ hard Brexit’ would mean Britain withdrawin­g entirely from Europe’s single market and negotiatin­g new trade arrangemen­ts in order to impose

The referendum vote was a vote for us to... bring control into our immigratio­n system. I’m clear that is part of what we need to deliver. We will be able to have control over our borders, of our laws.

strict immigratio­n controls.

May has come under increasing pressure to reveal more detailed plans about her Brexit strategy, and promised to do so during a series of speeches in ‘the coming weeks’.

“When people voted in the referendum on the 23rd of June, they voted to leave the European Union, but they also voted for change and this year, 2017, is the year in which we start to make that happen,” she told Sky News.

The prime minister, who took power after David Cameron resigned in the wake of the Brexit vote, stressed that Britain could still secure favourable access for businesses trading within the EU, although critics warn that negotiatio­ns will be fraught and complex.

“We will be working to get the best possible deal in the trading relationsh­ip with the EU,” May said.

She also rejected last week’s parting shot delivered by Ivan Rogers, Britain’s outgoing top EU ambassador, that the government does not have a clear plan.

May said her “thinking on this isn’t muddled at all” and accused the previous administra­tion of not preparing a strategy in case of Brexit. May has promised to activate Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, triggering a two-year period in which Britain will negotiate its departure from the EU, by the end of March.

If no deal is reached, Britain will automatica­lly leave the EU’s institutio­ns, with reciprocal tariffs likely placed on businesses in the UK and the EU. — AFP

Theresa May, UK Prime Minister

 ??  ?? May (left) is interviewe­d by Sophy Ridge on Sky News, during the Ridge on Sunday programme, in London, Britain. — Reuters photo
May (left) is interviewe­d by Sophy Ridge on Sky News, during the Ridge on Sunday programme, in London, Britain. — Reuters photo

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