Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Deal struck to keep Gibraltar’s border open

Tiny British territory on tip of Spain ‘can breathe sigh of relief,’ official says

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MADRID, Spain — An eleventh-hour breakthrou­gh in protracted negotiatio­ns will keep open Gibraltar’s border with Spain after the United Kingdom’s full departure from the European Union, Spanish Foreign Minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya announced Thursday.

Just hours before the U.K. was to complete its break from the 27-nation bloc, Madrid and London clinched “an agreement in principle” that means people in the speck of British territory on Spain’s southern tip “can breathe a sigh of relief,” Gonzalez Laya said.

The key to the deal is that The Rock, the sovereignt­y of which is disputed by Spain and Britain, will remain subject to rules in use in Europe’s Schengen area, she said. That area consists of about two dozen nations that have agreed to eliminate general travel checks among them. Britain is not in the Schengen group.

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said in a statement that the negotiatin­g teams wanted to “ensure border fluidity, which is clearly in the best interests of the people living on both sides.”

The compromise agreement between Spain and the U.K. will be sent to Brussels, where the European Commission will enter into negotiatio­ns with London to turn it into a treaty, Gonzalez Laya said.

She said she expected the treaty to be signed within six months.

The head of Gibraltar’s government, Fabian Picardo, warned that there were still tough negotiatio­ns ahead in drawing up the treaty, including jurisdicti­on issues and import duties.

“There will be complexity to come,” he said at a news conference, adding that “we may end up with a deal on the [free] movement of people but not goods.”

Gonzalez Laya said the agreement’s technical details, such as how Gibraltar’s port and airport will be policed, will be published this year. A major hurdle in the negotiatio­ns was whether EU representa­tives could be stationed in the British territory.

Spain is to ensure that Gibraltar abides by Schengen rules.

In the U.K.’s 2016 Brexit referendum, 96% of voters in Gibraltar supported remaining in the EU. They faced the possibilit­y of entering 2021 with tight new controls on what for decades has been an open border with the bloc through Spain.

A lot was riding on the outcome for Gibraltar, which needs access to the EU market for its tiny economy. The territory is home to around 34,000 people.

More than 15,000 people live in Spain and work in Gibraltar, making up about 50% of its labor market.

Gibraltar wasn’t part of the Brexit trade deal between the EU and the U.K., which was announced on Christmas Eve.

The territory was ceded to Britain in 1713, but Spain maintains its claim to sovereignt­y over it. That dispute has occasional­ly flared.

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