Muscat Daily

EU Brexit chief preparing for ‘possible’ failure

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Paris, France - EU Brexit chief Michel Barnier said on Sunday that he is making contingenc­y plans for the ‘possible’ failure of divorce talks with Britain, which he has given two weeks to reach preliminar­y agreement on key issues.

“It’s not my (preferred) option,” he told French weekly Le Journal du Dimanche (JDD). “But it’s a possibilit­y. Everyone needs to plan for it, member states and businesses alike. We too are preparing for it technicall­y.”

He recalled that without a deal on post-Brexit trade terms the EU and Britain would revert to World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) tariffs, with trade ties ‘like those we have with China’.

On Friday Barnier gave Britain a two-week ultimatum to make concession­s on a divorce agreement if it wants to unlock the next phase of talks in December.

He said it was ‘vital’ for Britain to increase its offer on its exit bill - which a figure senior EU officials put at up to € 60bn (US$70bn) - to open up talks on a future trade deal.

EU leaders decided at their last summit in October that there was insufficie­nt progress on the exit bill as well as two other main issues - Northern Ireland and the rights of three million Europeans living in Britain.

They said they hoped to open talks on future relations and a post-Brexit transition period at their next meeting on December 14-15, but officials have warned that could now slip to February or March.

The fate of the border between British-ruled Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland has thrown an unexpected spanner into the works.

British negotiator David Davis insisted that any Brexit deal cannot create a frontier between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom.

But the EU called at talks in Brussels last week for Northern Ireland to effectivel­y stay in a customs union with the bloc to prevent a hard border with Ireland.

The open border helped underpin the 1998 peace deal that ended decades of sectarian unrest. “The tragic conflict between the Protestant­s and the Catholics was not that long ago,” Barnier, a former French foreign minister, told JDD.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Britain’s chief Brexit negotiator David Davis (left) and EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier address the media after a sixth round of Brexit talks, in Brussels on Friday
(AFP) Britain’s chief Brexit negotiator David Davis (left) and EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier address the media after a sixth round of Brexit talks, in Brussels on Friday

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