Scottish Daily Mail

EU’S TANTRUM OVER BREXIT DIVORCE BILL

Brussels orders Britain to ‘get serious’ and pay up ... but it’s accused of trying to hold us to ransom

- By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor

THE EU’s chief Brexit negotiator was accused of trying to hold Britain to ransom over the socalled ‘divorce bill’ last night as talks threatened to descend into acrimony.

At a meeting in Brussels, Michel Barnier lashed out at Brexit Secretary David Davis for refusing to say how much Britain was willing to pay towards the EU’s demand for about £74billion.

In the most hostile confrontat­ion of Brexit talks so far, Mr Barnier tried to scold Mr Davis, telling him: ‘We must start negotiatin­g seriously.’

He warned there would be no trade deal unless Britain coughed up, despite German business leaders calling for an early agreement.

Last night a British source hit back, dismissing the remarks as ‘inconsiste­nt, ill-judged, ill-considered and unhelpful for the next round of negotiatio­ns’. And MPs accused Mr Barnier of making ‘outrageous’ demands without any legal justificat­ion.

As the week of talks kicked off yesterday, each side blamed the other for stalling progress. Mr Barnier had demanded Mr Davis arrived ready to set out what the UK would pay.

But the Brexit Secretary ruled out making any such commitment until the EU gave the legal basis for its claim.

Mr Barnier denounced the UK for refusing to provide a document revealing what it believed it owes.

He said: ‘To be honest I’m concerned that time passes quickly. We need UK papers that are clear in order to have constructi­ve negotiatio­ns, and the sooner we remove the ambiguity, the sooner we will be in a position to discuss the future relationsh­ip and a transition­al period.’

The ex-French minister said the 27 countries remaining in the EU were clear that talks had to move forward over the bill and the rights of Europeans in the UK before trade discussion­s could begin.

He said: ‘The EU27 and the European Parliament stand united – they we will not accept that separation issues are not addressed properly.’

But Mr Davis responded by urging his counterpar­t to show ‘flexibilit­y and imaginatio­n’, and told him twice that the UK wanted to move forward with ‘all the issues’ and not just the money.

Tory MP Andrew Bridgen said: ‘What Mr Barnier means by “negotiatin­g seriously” is giving in to their outrageous demands. He is trying to hold us to ransom. It’s a desperate throw of the dice as he knows that legally we do not owe them anything at all. Anything we pay is a goodwill gesture that must be linked to what sort of trade deal we get. That is the truth he cannot escape from.’

British officials believe Brussels will be forced into a climbdown as EU leaders face a backlash from European businesses if they stall trade talks.

In the first sign of a revolt, German business leaders yesterday issued a plea to the EU to begin work on a trade agreement.

The influentia­l Associatio­n of German Chambers of Commerce (DIHK) warned it was important for businesses on both sides of the Channel for them to start looking at the future arrangemen­ts.

Mr Barnier had stoked tensions by claiming in a French newspaper that Brexit would have ‘practical consequenc­es’ on UK security.

‘Giving in to their outrageous demands’ ‘Desperate throw of the dice’

As the talks continue in Brussels, Theresa May will this evening fly to Japan for a three-day trip expected to include a meeting with Emperor Akihito and prime minister Shinzo Abe.

Yesterday, Japan’s deputy cabinet secretary Yasutoshi Nishimura warned the country’s businesses wanted reassuranc­es as they felt a ‘sense of crisis’ over Brexit, and officials played down the chances of starting talks on a trade deal.

‘We need to make use of Prime Minister May’s visit for conveying Japan’s stance to various levels in Britain and EU,’ he said.

The UK is the second most important destinatio­n for Japanese investment after the US.

Last night Downing Street said Japanese firms had ‘continued to show confidence in the UK’ with, for instance, Nissan building its new Qashqai in Sunderland.

Comment – Page 14

 ??  ?? You must be joking: Michel Barnier and David Davis, right, in Brussels yesterday
You must be joking: Michel Barnier and David Davis, right, in Brussels yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom