The Star Malaysia

EU sets the terms for new Brexit delay

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BRUSSELS: The agreement by EU leaders to grant Britain another extension to ratify its exit from the European Union sets several conditions, including those designed to protect the bloc from British interferen­ce.

Following are the key conditions contained in the conclusion­s of the eight-hour summit in Brussels.

Not “undermine” EU

In answer to May’s April 5 letter for a new delay, her 27 counterpar­ts gave her until Oct 31 to persuade a divided British parliament to ratify the withdrawal agreement she struck in Brussels last November.

The leaders stressed that “the extension cannot be allowed to undermine the regular functionin­g of the Union and its institutio­ns.”

EU countries are trying to make sure that Britain does not interfere in upcoming decisions on a new multi-year budget, trade policies or a new president of the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm.

European Parliament elections

If Britain has not ratified the divorce by May 22, it must hold the elections to the European Parliament from May 23-May 26.

If London fails to meet such a EU legal requiremen­t, it will crash out of the bloc on June 1 without an agreement.

No renegotiat­ions

The EU leaders reiterated the withdrawal agreement reached last November cannot be reopened. Many members of May’s ruling Conservati­ve Party oppose a clause in the divorce deal that they say could keep British Northern Ireland indefinite­ly in the bloc’s customs union.

Future ties

The leaders stressed that the EU and Britain must not use the extension to start negotiatio­ns on a post-Brexit relationsh­ip, including on trade. New discussion­s would have to be in line with EU negotiatin­g guidelines, which include a guarantee to maintain an open Irish border.

Sincere cooperatio­n

The leaders took note of London’s pledge to act constructi­vely and responsibl­y during the extension in line with “the duty of sincere cooperatio­n” as a withdrawin­g member. Britain therefore must “facilitate the achievemen­t of the Union’s tasks and refrain from any measure which could jeopardise the attainment of the Union’s objectives.”

It highlighte­d again that London must not sabotage the bloc’s decision-making processes.

Separate meetings

Apart from meetings involving Britain and the other EU members to discuss Brexit, London will be excluded from talks involving any post-Brexit EU business.

European leaders will review progress at its regularly scheduled summit in June.

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