The Borneo Post

May rejects call by Scottish government for a second referendum

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May yesterday rejected a call by the Scottish government for a second referendum on independen­ce before Britain leaves the EU – but did not rule out a vote entirely.

“I say now is not the time,” she said, arguing that all of Britain's energies should be put into the forthcomin­g Brexit negotiatio­ns.

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced Monday that she wanted a fresh vote on leaving Britain, saying Scotland did not want the 'hard Brexit' that May's Conservati­ve government is pursuing.

The Scottish National Party ( SNP) leader suggested the referendum could take place between autumn 2018 and spring 2019 – before Britain is expected to leave the EU.

Sturgeon will seek approval in the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh for a new vote on Wednesday, but London has the right to block the request.

“Right now we should be working together, not pulling apart,” May said in a televised interview.

“We should be working together to get that right deal for Scotland, that right deal for the UK. As I say, that's my job as prime minister and so for that reason I say to the SNP: Now is not the time.”

But she refused repeated questions about when the right time for a new referendum might be, leaving the door open for a vote further in the future.

May had previously said there was no appetite for a second referendum less than three years after Scots voted by 55 per cent to 45 per cent to reject independen­ce, in September 2014.

The SNP government was re- elected last year with a manifesto stating that it could call a second vote if there was a significan­t change in the country's circumstan­ces – such as Brexit.

The majority of Scotland voted to stay in the European Union last June, but Britain as a whole voted by 52 percent to leave. — AFP

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Theresa May

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