Weekend Herald

Leaders size up May’s Brexit rights offer

EU members accuse PM of being vague about who will be allowed to remain in UK

- Philip Blenkinsop Grizzlies lose protection

Theresa May said her offer to fellow European Union leaders to guarantee the rights of their compatriot­s living in Britain after Brexit was “very fair and very serious” but her peers sounded sceptical, with Belgium’s leader calling it “particular­ly vague”.

“I want to reassure all those EU citizens who are in the UK, who have made their lives and homes in the UK, that no one will have to leave. We won’t be seeing families split apart,” May said on arrival for the second day of a regular European Union summit in Brussels yesterday.

“Last night I was pleased to be able to set out what is a very fair and a very serious offer for EU citizens who are living in the United Kingdom,” she said, adding that she would i ssue detailed proposals on Monday and seek reciprocal rights for about a million Britons living on the continent

More detail was what most of the other 27 leaders said they wanted, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who called it a “good start” but made clear that her focus was on the EU’s future without Britain.

Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel called it a “particular­ly vague proposal” and described it using a Flemish expression for a dubious gift.

“We don’t want a cat in the bag,” he said. “We want the rights of EU citizens to be permanentl­y guaranteed.”

In particular, the EU leaders want their citizens to be able to enforce their rights in Britain through the European Court of Justice, something May has flatly ruled out. They also dispute her attempt to limit those rights potentiall­y to people already living in Britain before she triggered Brexit three months ago.

Given the floor for 10 minutes at the end of a Brussels summit dinner, May outlined five principles, notably that no EU citizen resident in Britain at a cut- off date would be deported. There are roughly 3 million living there now. May said those EU citizens who had lived in Britain for five years could stay for life. Those there for less would be allowed to stay until they reach the five- year threshold for “settled status”.

Red tape for permanent residency would be cut and there would be a two- year grace period to avoid “cliff edge” misfortune­s.

“It i s a first good step which we appreciate,” said Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern. “Many details are left open. A lot of European citizens are concerned and not covered by May’s proposal. There is a long, long way to go for negotiatio­ns.”

Brussels has been dismissive of May’s call for sweeping and quick guarantees for expats and says only detailed legal texts can reassure people and take complex, multinatio­nal family situations into account.

On the opening day leaders had agreed with summit chairman Donald Tusk not to open discussion­s with May and she left the other 27 to discuss other Brexit issues without her.

They were briefed by Michel Barnier, who launched the Brexit negotiatio­ns for them on Monday, and discussed the move of t wo EU agencies from London after Britain quits.

Weakened by an election she did not need to call, May has watered down her Government’s programme to try to get it through Parliament and set a softer tone in her approach to Brexit. Yet her aims have held — she wants a clean break from the bloc, leaving the lucrative single market and customs union and so reducing immigratio­n and ending EU courts’ jurisdicti­on. A Canadian Special Operations sniper shot an Islamic State fighter from 3.45km away in Iraq, the Torontobas­ed Globe and Mail newspaper reported yesterday. The shot, according to the report, happened within the last month. In a statement following publicatio­n of the Globe and Mail article, the Canadian Special Operations Command confirmed that one of its soldiers from the elite Joint Task Force 2 hit a human target from 3540m away. The statement did not say exactly where the event took place. “For operationa­l security reasons and to preserve the safety of our personnel and our Coalition partners, we will not discuss precise details on when and how this incident took place,” the statement said. “The [ Special Operations Task Force] provides its expertise to Iraqi security force to detect, identify and defeat Daesh activities from well behind the Iraqi security force front line in Mosul,” it added, using an Arabic acronym for Isis ( Islamic State). If true, the shot — or multiple shots — would join the macabre ranks of the longest sniper kills in history. A Virginia man caught with $ 16,500 ($ 22,645) in cash in his carry- on luggage was charged yesterday with transmitti­ng top- secret documents to an apparent Chinese agent. Kevin Mallory, 60, of Leesburg was arrested yesterday and made an initial appearance in US District Court in Alexandria, Virginia. The selfemploy­ed consultant who speaks Chinese is charged under the federal Espionage Act and could face life in prison. If certain conditions are met, the charges could make Mallory eligible for the death penalty, prosecutor John Gibbs said at Mallory’s initial appearance. Court records indicate that Mallory was an army veteran and worked as a special agent for the Diplomatic Security Service at the US State Department from 1987 to 1990. Since 1990, he has worked for a variety of government agencies and defence contractor­s, according to the affidavit. He held Top Secret security clearance until he left government service in 2012. The main burn centre in Phoenix has seen its emergency department visits double during the heat wave that is scorching the Southwest US, including people burning their bare feet on the scalding pavement. Dr Kevin Foster, director of the Arizona Burn Centre, said this June is the worst the centre has seen in 18 years. Most patients arrive with contact burns from touching hot car interiors or walking outside without shoes. Foster said one child received contact burns after crawling through a doggy door onto the hot pavement. The burns are among several hazards resulting from a heat wave that has plagued Arizona, Nevada and California, including deaths, increased wildfire risks and a water shortage in one community. The heat wave brought a high of 48C in Phoenix on Wednesday. Protection­s that have been in place for more than 40 years for grizzly bears in the Yellowston­e National Park area will be lifted after US government officials ruled yesterday that the population is no longer threatened. Grizzlies in all continenta­l US states except Alaska have been protected under the Endangered Species Act since 1975, when just 136 bears roamed in and around Yellowston­e. There are now an estimated 700 grizzlies in the area.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Johnny Depp greets fans during his appearance at the Glastonbur­y Festival yesterday. Arrest in espionage case Scorcher in Southwest
Picture / AP Johnny Depp greets fans during his appearance at the Glastonbur­y Festival yesterday. Arrest in espionage case Scorcher in Southwest
 ??  ?? Angela Merkel
Angela Merkel
 ??  ?? Theresa May
Theresa May

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