Cape Times

UK Brexit plan slammed as EU members get tough

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LONDON: It would be a serious derelictio­n of duty if the British government failed to plan for the possibilit­y of not reaching an exit deal with the EU, a committee of lawmakers said in a report published on Sunday.

Prime Minister Theresa May, who will trigger the formal divorce process by the end of this month, has said she would be prepared to walk away from negotiatio­ns without an agreement because “no deal is better than a bad deal”.

Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty allows for a period of up to two years of divorce talks.

Parliament’s Foreign Affairs committee warned that a breakdown in negotiatio­ns would be a “very destructiv­e outcome”, causing economic harm to both sides as well as creating uncertaint­y and legal confusion for individual­s and businesses.

“There is a real prospect that negotiatio­ns will fail,” committee chairman Crispin Blunt, a lawmaker in May’s ruling Conservati­ves, said in a statement.

“The government should therefore require each department to produce a ‘no deal’ plan identifyin­g the likely consequenc­es and making proposals, including guidance to individual­s and businesses, to mitigate potential risks,” he said.

“Anything less would be a derelictio­n of duty.”

Issues such as the sudden return of a customs border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, a gap in regulation­s and confusion about the future of UK citizens in the EU and vice versa were among the consequenc­es of a “no deal” situation highlighte­d by the committee.

Meanwhile, EU government­s are sharpening their red lines while maintainin­g general unity as London prepares for Brexit.

Although the EU’s 27 other government­s have differing priorities, they remain united in wanting Michel Barnier, the bloc’s chief negotiator, to drive a hard bargain.

The EU members have insisted that the UK couldn’t remain part of the European single market for goods and services if it wanted to restrict the bloc’s principle of free movement by controllin­g immigratio­n from other EU countries.

Some maintain they want to keep as close ties to the UK as possible, others can barely conceal their ambition to punish the UK for leaving the club. Practicall­y all say the UK needs to be seen to be worse off outside the EU than in it. Reuters and Washington Post

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? French President François Hollande addresses the media after an EU summit focusing on Brexit last week.
PICTURE: EPA French President François Hollande addresses the media after an EU summit focusing on Brexit last week.

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