The Borneo Post

EU leaders to agree Brexit talks guidelines

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BRUSSELS: European Union leaders will lay the ground yesterday for the next phase of Brexit talks after British Prime Minister Theresa May urged them to seize a “new dynamic” in the negotiatio­ns.

The 27 leaders meeting in Brussels are set to adopt negotiatin­g guidelines for talks on the future relationsh­ip with Britain, and greenlight a deal for a 21-month transition period.

May stayed overnight to join delayed talks on the EU’s trade dispute with the United States, but will leave her counterpar­ts later yesterday when the summit turns to the topic of Brexit.

Over dinner on Thursday, she urged her colleagues to use the momentum from the transition agreement to tackle the tough questions of trade and the Irish border with “energy and ambition”.

We have the chance, now, to create a new dynamic in the talks to work together to explore workable solutions – in Northern Ireland, in our future security cooperatio­n and in order to ensure the future prosperity of all our people.

“We have the chance, now, to create a new dynamic in the talks to work together to explore workable solutions – in Northern Ireland, in our future security cooperatio­n and in order to ensure the future prosperity of all our people,” May said, according to her office.

She said the deal struck this week on a post-Brexit transition took “compromise on both sides” but had delivered certainty for businesses and citizens across Britain and the European Union.

May will also be hoping to capitalise on a diplomatic victory on Thursday after securing unanimous EU backing for Britain’s assessment that Russia was “highly likely” responsibl­e for the poisoning of an ex- spy in the English city of Salisbury.

The transition period is intended to smooth Britain’s withdrawal from the bloc in March 2019, and extends the UK membership of the EU’s single market – but without voting rights – until the end of 2020. But key issues remain.

The EU’s negotiatin­g guidelines warn Britain against backtracki­ng on the commitment­s that led to the transition accord, and call for “intensifie­d efforts” on the outstandin­g parts of the divorce.

“Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed,” t h e guidelines s a y , according to a draft copy seen by AFP. The EU and Britain have agreed a “backstop” that Northern Ireland would remain part of the EU’s customs union if there is no better idea – but London is deeply opposed to this. Just weeks earlier May had said no British premier could ever accept such an idea. “Once we move on to the stage of being able to talk about the future partnershi­p, that is where we believe the solution to the Irish border will be found,” a senior UK official said. Irish premier Leo Varadkar, who met May on the sidelines of the summit on Thursday, said he envisaged a trading relationsh­ip that was “so close that many of measures in the backstop may become unnecessar­y”.

The EU guidelines say that “negotiatio­ns can only progress as long as all commitment­s undertaken so far are respected in full”.

They also welcome a letter May wrote on Monday giving “written assurances notably regarding Ireland/Northern Ireland”.

Days before the summit, EU President Donald Tusk had raised fears that some countries would not back the plan, with Spain in particular expressing concerns about the fate of the British territory of Gibraltar.

But he later announced that he had “good news” for May and officials said that Madrid had been placated by the addition of a special mention of Gibraltar in the guidelines. — AFP

Theresa May, British Prime Minister

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Theresa May

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