The Borneo Post

EU Parliament prepares to set Brexit ‘red lines’

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STRASBOURG, France: The European Parliament yesterday laid down its ‘ red lines’ for negotiatio­ns over a Brexit deal, on which the assembly will have the final say in two years’ time.

The parliament in Strasbourg, France, is set to back a call by EU leaders for Britain to first agree to divorce terms before striking any new trade deal with the bloc.

MEPs are to vote on the motion a week after British Prime Minister Theresa May formally triggered the process for leaving the EU.

“We want to have a clear signal that the European Union is united,” said German MEP Manfred Weber, the head of the conservati­ve European People’s Party ( EPP), the parliament’s biggest bloc.

“London must understand that no splitting up of the EU position is possible,” Weber told reporters on Tuesday.

The guidelines to be voted already have the support of not only the EPP but also of the Socialists and Democrats alliance, as well as the ALDE liberals, the Greens and the leftist parliament­ary group GUE.

The parliament will be the first EU institutio­n to take an official stand on the Brexit talks.

“This (vote) is the starting point of a difficult and complex negotiatio­n to define the conditions of the United Kingdom’s departure,” Parliament President Antonio Tajani said.

The guidelines, which Weber called ‘ red lines’, reinforce the draft guidelines unveiled last Friday by EU President Donald Tusk, who represents the member states.

But the 27 countries will not formally approve them until a summit on April 29.

Tusk’s guidelines call for ‘sufficient progress’ on divorce terms before a new trade deal is struck, as well as protection­s of the rights of EU citizens and the border in Northern Ireland.

“The right order for negotiatio­ns has to be respected,” Weber said.

The Brexit talks have already gotten off to a difficult start after London was alarmed by a clause in the guidelines saying Spain had to be consulted on any post-Brexit trade deal that affects the British outcrop of Gibraltar.

A draft parliament­ary resolution said talks on ‘possible transition­al arrangemen­ts’ for a future deal could begin if ‘substantia­l progress’ were made towards divorce.

Any transition­al period to work out a trade deal after Britain formally leaves the European Union in March 2019 should be limited to three years.

We want to have a clear signal that the European Union is united. London must understand that no splitting up of the EU position is possible.

The resolution also insists that Britain must pay to withdraw.

“Until the day you leave, you have to pay your share of the bills,” Socialists and Democrats leader Gianni Pittella said at a press briefing in Strasbourg on Tuesday.

And the resolution calls for protecting the rights of the three million European citizens living in Britain, and the one million Britons residing in EU countries.

“Europe’s citizens come first,” Weber said.

Opposition to EU migrants helped fuel the Brexit campaign which culminated in the shock vote by Britons last June to leave the bloc.

The EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier and European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker are expected to address the European Parliament after it opens debate at 9am.

The parliament is likely to hold a vote on any final Brexit deal at the end of 2018 or in early 2019. — AFP

Manfred Weber, head of the conservati­ve European People’s Party

 ??  ?? Barnier (right) speaks with member of the European Parliament and former leader of the anti-EU UK Independen­ce Party (UKIP) Nigel Farage at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. — AFP photo
Barnier (right) speaks with member of the European Parliament and former leader of the anti-EU UK Independen­ce Party (UKIP) Nigel Farage at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. — AFP photo

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