Bangkok Post

EU agrees to Brexit deal, after UK accepts Gibraltar terms

Unanimous support in Brussels summit

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BRUSSELS: The leaders of the 27 European Union members states yesterday approved the terms of a historic Brexit deal with Britain, at a special summit in Brussels.

“EU27 has endorsed the Withdrawal Agreement and Political Declaratio­n on the future EU-UK relations,” EU Council President Donald Tusk announced on Twitter.

The special summit was almost derailed by a row over Gibraltar, however, Prime Minister Theresa May on Saturday night said: “We will always negotiate on behalf of the whole UK family, including Gibraltar,” on arrival for talks in Brussels.

Forged during 17 months of tough negotiatio­ns, the deal covers financial matters, citizens’ rights, Northern Ireland and a transition phase, and sets out hopes for future security and trade ties.

But it is not the final stage, as the House of Commons in London must still approve the deal before Brexit day on March 29, 2019 — and many MPs have warned they will not back it.

Until the agreement is approved, all sides are still planning for the potentiall­y disastrous possibilit­y that Britain ends its four-decade EU membership with no new arrangemen­ts in place.

EU Council President Donald Tusk, who has always said he would prefer Britain not to leave, said on the eve of the summit that “no-one will have reasons to be happy” when Brexit happens.

But he said terms had been agreed that would “reduce risks”, and recommende­d that EU leaders sign off on the deal.

Euroscepti­cs in Ms May’s Conservati­ve party and their Northern Irish allies warn they will not support the agreement when MPs vote as expected next month.

But in an open “letter to the nation” yesterday, Ms May said it delivered on the 2016 referendum vote to leave, and was a “deal for a brighter future”.

Britain remains deeply divided over the decision, but the prime minister said that finally leaving could be “a moment of renewal and reconcilia­tion”.

“To do that we need to get on with Brexit now by getting behind this deal,” she said.

Ms May arrived on the eve of the summit for final talks with Mr Tusk and European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker, after which Mr Tusk’s spokesman tweeted: “We are on track for tomorrow.”

But nothing in the negotiatio­ns has gone smoothly and the summit risked being derailed by objection to the deal by Spain over the British territory of Gibraltar.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez threatened to reject it unless his country kept a veto over future changes to EU ties with “The Rock”, which borders Spain and which it has long claimed.

The impasse was resolved when Britain promised to continue bilateral talks with Madrid after Brexit — although that itself caused further tensions.

Mr Sanchez claimed that discussion­s would cover the “co-sovereignt­y” of Gibraltar, something residents overwhelmi­ngly rejected in a 2002 referendum.

Ms May was quick to correct her Spanish counterpar­t, saying: “The UK’s position on the sovereignt­y of Gibraltar has not changed and will not change.”

In legal terms, Spain’s disapprova­l would not have halted the divorce settlement.

But it would have been an embarrassi­ng split for EU leaders who have proved remarkably united in the painful negotiatio­n.

British MPs are most concerned about an arrangemen­t in the withdrawal agreement to keep open the border between British Northern Ireland and Ireland.

 ?? AFP ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May, left, is welcomed by European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, centre, and Brexit Chief negotiator Michel Barnier, right, at the European Commission in Brussels on Saturday.
AFP British Prime Minister Theresa May, left, is welcomed by European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, centre, and Brexit Chief negotiator Michel Barnier, right, at the European Commission in Brussels on Saturday.

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