Oman Daily Observer

Long delay to Brexit unless you back PM’S deal: May ally

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In Sydney, 18-year-old Charles Rickwood, warned that Australia’s famous Great Barrier Reef could be destroyed.

“Especially if current trends in the environmen­t continue, we’ll see the one, two degrees increase in our ocean then it will simply become unsustaina­ble and we could lose the entire Great Barrier Reef,” he said. European students were also out en masse, with several thousand youngsters throng the streets of central London in a raucous demonstrat­ion featuring a multitude of banners, placards and sloganeeri­ng.

Packing into Parliament Square, they cheered and chanted “Change... now!” before marching past Downing Street and massing outside LONDON: Prime Minister Theresa May’s deputy warned lawmakers on Friday that unless they approved her Brexit divorce deal after two crushing defeats, Britain’s exit from the European Union could face a long delay.

The United Kingdom’s divorce from the EU has sown chaos throughout May’s premiershi­p and the Brexit finale is still uncertain. Options include a long delay, exiting with May’s deal, leaving without a deal or even another referendum.

The British parliament voted overwhelmi­ngly on Thursday to seek a delay to the March 29 exit date enshrined in law.

May says she wants to minimise any delay to just three months, but to achieve that she will need parliament to back her deal at the third time of asking early next week, possibly on Tuesday.

In essence, May has handed Brexit supporters an ultimatum — ratify her deal by March 20 or face a delay to Brexit way beyond June 30 that would open up the possibilit­y that the entire divorce could be ultimately thwarted.

May’s de-facto deputy, Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington, said he hoped the United Kingdom would leave in an orderly fashion but if May’s deal was not approved then a long extension was on the cards.

“You don’t just have a short, technical extension to our membership of the European Union you almost certainly need a significan­tly longer one to find a time for parliament to come to a majority verdict,” he told BBC radio.

“I hope that MPS (lawmakers) of all parties will be over this weekend reflecting on the way forward,” Lidington said, adding the legal default was that the United Kingdom would leave on March 29, unless something else is agreed.

EU leaders will consider pressing Britain to delay Brexit by at least a year to find a way out of the domestic maelstrom, though there is shock and growing impatience at the political chaos in London.

“There is profession­al bewilderme­nt that the motherland of common sense is in this place,” one European diplomat said.

 ?? — AFP ?? Anti-brexit activists fly EU flags as fishing boats take part in a demonstrat­ion on the River Tyne in Newcastle, northeast England, on Friday, against the terms of the current Brexit deal being offered by Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May.
— AFP Anti-brexit activists fly EU flags as fishing boats take part in a demonstrat­ion on the River Tyne in Newcastle, northeast England, on Friday, against the terms of the current Brexit deal being offered by Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May.

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