The National - News

EU AGREES ON BREXIT STANCE

Leaders take just one minute to adopt negotiatin­g guidelines unchanged from EU president’s recommenda­tions

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Leaders of the bloc’s nations unanimousl­y adopt strategy for British talks,

BRUSSELS // European Union leaders unanimousl­y adopted their Brexit strategy at a special summit in Brussels on Saturday, in a show of unity ahead of two years of tough talks with Britain.

The 27 leaders quickly agreed on the negotiatin­g guidelines as they met without Britain for the first time since prime minister Theresa May triggered the leaving process a month ago.

They said talks on a new trade deal with Britain could only start after London agrees the terms of the separation on citizens’ rights, its exit bill and Northern Ireland.

“Guidelines adopted unanimousl­y. EU27 firm and fair political mandate for the Brexit talks is ready,” EU president Donald Tusk said on Twitter shortly after the summit began.

Leaders adopted the guidelines, unchanged, within one minute, an EU source said.

Mr Tusk earlier said leaders “need to remain united as the EU 27” but said it was “also in Britain’s interest” if unity boosted the chances of a swift Brexit deal.

Ms May this week accused the EU of ganging up on London, in a war of words with German Chancellor Angela Merkel who said Britain had “illusions” about the talks.

Brexit has offered the EU a new chance at unity after years of internal divisions over the euro and migration, although many still fear they could fall out during the talks.

French president Francois Hollande said as he arrived that “the aim of the summit is unity”, adding that “there will inevitably be a price and a cost for Britain”.

Ms Merkel said the EU wants “good relations” with Britain but added that “we also want to defend, at 27, our common interests – so far we have done extremely well”.

The EU’s chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, said the bloc had a “clear line” on the talks. “But this unity is not directed against Britain, I think that it is also in its interest,” he said. The EU 27 have considerab­ly toughened the guidelines since Mr Tusk unveiled them a month ago, with Brussels also drawing up a detailed list of citizens’ rights.

Mr Tusk said this issue – the fate of three million EU citizens living in Britain and one million Britons on the continent – “must be number one priority for EU and the UK”.

Officials hope for agreement on this by the end of the year.

In a further move that will rile London, the EU is also set to back automatic membership for Northern Ireland if it reunifies with Ireland, and the trade bloc will also call for Spain to have a say over any deal that affects Gibraltar.

The leaders will also discuss for the first time the spoils of Brexit – the relocation of EU medical and banking agencies that are currently based in London.

The EU guidelines say that only when “sufficient progress” has been made on exit issues can these trade talks begin, with sources saying they hope to do that by the end of the year.

While the EU has said citizens’ rights is a priority, the most touchy issue of all is likely to be Britain’s exit bill.

This is estimated at about €60 billion (Dh240bn), which covers mainly financial commitment­s made by the bloc while Britain was a member.

The bill is politicall­y toxic for Britain, but also risks causing divisions among EU states as they debate how to plug any holes in the EU’s budget.

Ms May’s decision to call a general election in Britain on June 8, in a bid to win a mandate and strengthen her negotiatin­g position, has only stiffened their resolve.

The elections are “an internal problem she wants to resolve in the Conservati­ve party, to have not a hard Brexit or a soft Brexit, but Theresa’s Brexit”, said Luxembourg’s prime minister Xavier Bettel.

Actual talks on Britain’s leaving of the bloc are not expected to begin until after the British election, although the EU is set to give an official mandate to Mr Barnier on May 22.

 ?? Martin Meissner / AP Photo ?? From left, Italian prime minister Paolo Gentiloni, German chancellor Angela Merkel and Austrian chancellor Christian Kern at the EU summit in Brussels yesterday.
Martin Meissner / AP Photo From left, Italian prime minister Paolo Gentiloni, German chancellor Angela Merkel and Austrian chancellor Christian Kern at the EU summit in Brussels yesterday.

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