The Borneo Post

Clock ticks as Brexit talks resume

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BRUSSELS: Britain and the European Union resume Brexit talks yesterday with little hope of a breakthrou­gh and fears that the fragility of Theresa May’s government threatens further progress before the end of the year.

The sixth round of negotiatio­ns is the first since EU leaders warned May at an Oct 20 summit that Britain had made insufficie­nt progress to move on from divorce issues to discussion­s of a future trade deal.

They said they planned to start internal preparatio­ns soon with the aim of kicking off trade talks with Britain in December, but officials warned that that deadline now seems increasing­ly shaky.

“More progress needed on three key topics,” EU negotatior Michel Barnier said on Twitter on the eve of the talks, along with a graphic showing the terms the remaining 27 EU states expect Britain to agree to.

This week’s talks feature a stripped down two- day schedule, with Frenchman Barnier and his British counterpar­t David Davis only set to meet on Friday morning, sources said.

The EU demands progress on three key divorce issues – Britain’s exit bill to meet its commitment­s to the EU budget, the fate of the border between Northern Ireland and Ireland and the rights of EU citizens in Britain.

The British premier’s government however looks increasing­ly distracted, with the resignatio­n of its aid minister over meetings in Israel on Wednesday adding to the sense of chaos since May’s disastrous showing in elections earlier this year.

“I see a strong willingnes­s to come to a deal. I am confident that everybody understand­s what has to be done on both sides,” an EU diplomat told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“The question is do they have the strength? And will the moves be made in time by the end of November, first week of December?”

Britain must show progress by then if it wants the bloc to move to talks on a future relationsh­ip and a post-Brexit transition period at the next summit on Dec 14, European sources said.

Failure to do so would likely push back the move to February or even March, leaving only around six months to reach a deal by October 2018, the timeline Barnier has set in order for the withdrawal agreement to be ratified by Brexit day in March 2019.

The EU says it wants Britain to provide written guarantees of a pledge to honour its financial commitment­s that May made in a speech in the Italian city of Florence in September.

“We don’t need speeches, we need commitment­s,” the diplomat said.

European Parliament chief Antonio Tajani – whose institutio­n will have the final vote on any Brexit deal – last month set the bill at around 50 to 60 billion euros (£ 58-70 billion), and said that the £20 billion proposed by London was ‘peanuts’. — AFP

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