Bangkok Post

Prospects of closer ties with EU fade

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ZURICH: Prospects for a new treaty cementing ties between Switzerlan­d and the European Union, its biggest trading partner, appeared to fade yesterday as four years of negotiatio­ns failed to produce a breakthrou­gh by the EU’s mid-October deadline.

The talks are complicate­d by Britain’s separate negotiatio­ns on divorce terms from the European Union, with the Commission loath to be too soft on the Swiss for fear of providing ammunition to Brexiteers.

“I can honestly say I find it difficult to believe that the government will be able to present by year’s end a solution to all the open questions,” Petra Goessi, leader of the pro-business Liberals party in the four-party cabinet, told the Neue Zuercher Zeitung paper.

“Switzerlan­d is not yet ready” for a treaty, she added in an interview published yesterday.

Swiss labour rules to protect high wages from cross-border competitio­n have been a major bone of contention with Brussels, which has been pushing to wrap up an accord by year-end.

Talks seemed deadlocked after a meeting of top negotiator­s in Brussels on Tuesday.

“Some progress was made but we saw no breakthrou­gh. Major political issues remain open. It is in this light that the European Commission will now have to assess at political level how to proceed,” a commision spokeswoma­n said.

Brussels has been heaping pressure on non-member Switzerlan­d to agree a pact that would sit atop an existing patchwork of 120 sectoral accords and have the Swiss routinely adopt changes to single market rules.

It would focus on five areas linked to the single market: the free movement of people, civil aviation, land transport, mutual recognitio­n of industrial standards and processed farm goods.

The treaty would also provide a more effective platform to resolve disputes, providing greater legal certainty.

Should treaty talks fail, and time is short ahead of elections in Switzerlan­d and for the European Parliament both due next year, the sectoral accords would stay in effect, but two-way ties would enter a deep freeze.

The Commission has threatened not to extend beyond this year recognitio­n of Swiss stock exchange rules that allow cross-border trading, which could touch off tit-for-tat escalation.

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