The Herald (South Africa)

Britain begins Brexit talks in midst of tower fire mourning

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BRITAIN begins historic talks today on leaving the European Union while still mourning the victims of a devastatin­g fire and reeling from an election that has badly weakened the government.

Brexit Minister David Davis will travel to Brussels to meet Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief negotiator, to kick off hugely complex withdrawal negotiatio­ns that are expected to conclude within two years.

Britain voted last year to end its decades-old membership of the 28-country bloc – the first state to do so – in a shock referendum result.

The government has developed a strategy of so-called hard Brexit, leaving the European market and the customs union in order to control immigratio­n from the EU.

But that entire approach has come under question following the June 8 general election in which Prime Minister Theresa May lost her Conservati­ve Party’s parliament­ary majority.

May has clung on to power but has so far failed to conclude an agreement with Northern Ireland’s ultra-conservati­ve Democratic Unionist Party that would bolster her ability to govern.

The Conservati­ves now have only 317 MPs in the 650-seat House of Commons and need the support of the DUP’s 10 MPs for a razor-thin majority.

The government is due to present its legislativ­e programme at the opening of parliament on Wednesday, with a key confidence vote days later.

Adding to what Queen Elizabeth called the sombre national mood have been three terrorist attacks in three months and a fire in a London tower block in which at least 58 people are presumed dead.

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