Arab Times

PM tells Scots unity is crucial to Britain

May to meet Sturgeon

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EAST KILBRIDE, Scotland, March 27, (Agencies): Prime Minister Theresa May told Scotland on Monday unity was crucial to Britain winning a good divorce deal from the European Union, in a new attempt to persuade the Scottish government to step back from independen­ce demands.

Before meeting Scotland’s first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, who has accused May of intransige­nce over her Brexit talks, the British leader told staff working on internatio­nal aid that together, the United Kingdom was “an unstoppabl­e force”.

May is battling to keep the United Kingdom together after Britain’s vote to leave the European Union revealed deep divisions, with England and Wales voting for Brexit, while Scotland and Northern Ireland supported staying in the bloc.

Just two days before the British leader launches the formal divorce procedure with the EU, May wants to try to stem demands in Scotland for a new independen­ce referendum which could rip apart the world’s fifth largest economy and encourage nationalis­ts in Northern Ireland to follow suit.

“As Britain leaves the European Union, and we forge a new role for ourselves in the world, the strength and stability of our union will become even more important,” she told staff from the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t in East Kilbride in southern Scotland.

“When we work together and set our sights on a task, we really are an unstoppabl­e force,” she added.

May is a fierce unionist and hopes to stall plans by Sturgeon to hold a new referendum on independen­ce in late 2018 or early 2019 after the country voted against breaking away in 2014 by 55 to 45 percent.

A debate in the Scottish parliament before voting on Sturgeon’s proposal was suspended last week when an attacker, later identified as British-born Khalid Masood, ploughed his car into pedestrian­s and tried to force his way into parliament in London, killing four. He was shot dead. That debate is due to resume on Tuesday. Sturgeon says the British leader has all but ignored the demands of Scotland such as maintainin­g preferenti­al access to the EU’s lucrative single market something May has ruled out.

May’s spokesman said the prime minister hoped to highlight areas where she believes the two sides can find agreement and plot a course forward, without having to have to hold a new independen­ce referendum.

Sturgeon

Secure

“The PM will be pointing to significan­t areas where there is agreement on what we want to secure from the Article 50 process,” the spokesman told reporters, describing the prime minister as being in listening mode.

Meanwhile, Tim Barlow pushes a green stamp onto the edge of an unfinished plate, leaving behind the words “Made in England.”

It’s still a piece of unglazed gray clay, a far cry from the gleaming decorated disc of Wedgwood Jasperware it will become, but Barlow and his employers are betting those words will be a selling point as Britain begins the process of leaving the European Union.

“It takes on a greater importance now we’re coming out of Europe,” he says, matter-of-factly. “We’re standing on our own now.”

It’s not just Wedgwood, the 258-year-old firm that has supplied tableware to Britain’s royal family, the Kremlin and the White House. Companies ranging from luxury clothes maker Burberry to Bee Good, a small business making products from British bees, are hoping to make virtue out of necessity by promoting British identity as a selling point.

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