The Philippine Star

UK agrees to pay EU $50 B in Brexit ‘divorce’ bill

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LONDON (AFP) — British and European negotiator­s have reached a deal for Britain to pay tens of billions of euros to leave the European Union, according to media reports yesterday.

London and Brussels have agreed on Britain’s financial obligation­s but had not settled on an exact amount for the so-called divorce bill, both

The Daily Telegraph and the Financial Times reported, citing diplomatic sources.

Both sides have now accepted the British will pay between $50-60 billion, with the final figure depending “on how each side calculates the output from an agreed methodolog­y,”

The Telegraph said. Meanwhile, the FT reported Britain would cover EU liabilitie­s worth as much as 100 billion euros, but when structured as net payments over many decades that could drop to less than half that amount.

The newspapers said negotiator­s, headed on the British side by leading Brexit official Olly Robbins, reached the understand­ing at meetings in Brussels last week.

An agreement would be a major breakthrou­gh as Britain prepares for an EU summit in December where it is hoping to get the go-ahead to start the next phase of talks on future trade ties with the EU.

It would leave two major areas on which the two sides still do not agree – expatriate citizens’ rights after Brexit and the future of the Irish border.

“The deal on the money is there,” a senior source involved in the negotiatio­ns told The Telegraph.

“It’s now the ECJ (European Court of Justice) question and Northern Ireland that are the outstandin­g issues ahead of the Council,” the source said.

One key area of contention is whether the 3.2 million EU citizens living in Britain will continue to be allowed to appeal to ECJ jurisdicti­on or if their rights will be governed by British courts, as London insists.

So far both sides have avoided publicly declaring a clear-cut number for what Britain owes the rest of the EU.

Prime Minister Theresa May had offered to cover Britain’s contributi­ons to its budget in 2019 and 2020 — a total of around 20 billion euros.

That pledge was reportedly doubled to 40 billion euros at a ministeria­l meeting in London last week.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Anti-Brexit protesters wave EU and Union flags outside the Houses of Parliament on Thursday.
REUTERS Anti-Brexit protesters wave EU and Union flags outside the Houses of Parliament on Thursday.

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