The Citizen (KZN)

Britain’s Brexit at final stage

TWO-YEAR WITHDRAWAL PROCESS TO BE TRIGGERED BY PRIME MINISTER

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Prime Minister Theresa May is expected to trigger Brexit this week by formally informing the European Union (EU) of Britain’s intention to leave the bloc, sending her country into uncharted waters.

The legislatio­n empowering May to put Britain on a course that no member state has ever taken returned to parliament for its final stages yesterday as European capitals prepare for mammoth negotiatio­ns.

After heated debate and a delay in the upper House of Lords, the Bill was expected to win final approval by both Houses leaving May’s path clear to begin Brexit whenever she wants.

The prime minister promised months ago to invoke Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty, starting the two-year withdrawal process, by the end of March.

Last week she expressed her impatience, telling reporters at a Brussels summit: “Our European partners have made clear to me that they want to get on with the negotiatio­ns, and so do I.”

Irish Premier Enda Kenny revealed at the same summit that the EU was preparing for Article 50 from tomorrow, while Britain’s opposition Labour party has also spoken of tomorrow or Thursday.

Once May has notified the EU of her decision by letter, the other 27 EU leaders will take some 48 hours to issue their first draft proposal for the negotiatio­ns but talks are not actually expected to begin for months as both sides finalise strategies.

EU leaders have planned a follow-up meeting on April 6, “provided the prime minister moves Article 50, I think by March 15”, Kenny said.

Triggering Article 50 this week would put Britain on course to leave the EU by March 2019 – a prospect that has caused concern about the future of European unity in some capitals. But unravellin­g four decades of membership and forging new trade ties to replace Britain’s membership of the single market within two years will be fiendishly complex.

EU leaders are determined that Brexit will not undermine the unity of the bloc, and that the final terms do not encourage other member states to follow Britain. – AFP

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