Khaleej Times

Breakthrou­gh not likely in Brexit talks

- Reuters

brussels — British officials arrive in Brussels on Monday hoping to push the EU towards talks about post-Brexit ties, which the bloc refuses to launch until there is a deal on London’s exit bill and other “divorce” questions.

The third round of Brexit talks comes more than a year after Britons voted in a referendum to leave the European Union.

The chief Brexit negotiator­s, the EU’s Michel Barnier and Britain’s David Davis, were to meet later. More technical talks on Tuesday and Wednesday will tackle expatriate rights, the divorce bill and “other separation issues”.

Senior officials will also discuss the problem of the future border between EU state Ireland and the United Kingdom’s Northern Ireland.

“Citizens’ rights, Ireland and financial settlement are priorities before talks about the future,” the European Parliament’s Brexit pointman, Guy Verhofstad­t, said after meeting Barnier on Monday.

Britain will present in detail papers on issues ranging from customs arrangemen­ts to data sharing.

Both the uK and the eu have an interest to move forward quickly in negotiatio­ns and that requires us to make sufficient progress on citizens’ rights and other issues A senior EU official

They often venture out into the future relationsh­ip between London and the EU.

Britain will be urging the bloc to show “imaginatio­n” and talk about future ties rather than just the divorce settlement.

Britain’s opposition Labour Party said on Sunday it would stay in the European single market and customs union for a transition­al period after Brexit, offering a clear alternativ­e to the policies of Prime Minister Theresa May.

Her senior ministers rule out any such option. But the government policy papers released last week show Britain would often seek to replicate closely existing arrangemen­ts with the EU. The British and German chambers of commerce together urged negotiator­s on Monday to start talks about future trading relations, and particular­ly customs arrangment­s, swiftly.

But the bloc wants to settle the chief separation aspects first.

It has signalled that the slow progress so far means the goal of starting talks about a new accord with Britain in October is now less likely to be achieved. “Both the UK and the EU have an interest to move forward quickly in negotiatio­ns and that requires us to make sufficient progress on citizens’ rights, on the financial settlement on Ireland,” said a senior EU official involved in the talks.

“The divorce issues should be relatively straightfo­rward to sort out. So it is not a matter of time needed in terms of the technical complexity, it is a matter of political will.” While there is some convergenc­e on safeguardi­ng the rights of European Union citizens residing in Britain and Britons living on the continent, more technical work is needed, EU sources say.—

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