Arab News

Scotland puts bid for second independen­ce vote on hold

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EDINBURGH: Scotland’s devolved government has shelved its immediate plans to hold a second independen­ce referendum until after the terms of Britain’s exit from the UK are clear, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said on Tuesday.

The Scottish Parliament in March backed Sturgeon’s bid to hold a new referendum in 2018 or early 2019, but British Prime Minister Theresa May had refused to enter into discussion­s on the proposal.

“We will not seek to introduce the legislatio­n for an independen­ce referendum immediatel­y,” she said, adding that she would still aim to offer a new vote on secession after it was clear what Britain’s decision to leave the EU meant.

Scots voted against independen­ce by 55 to 45 percent in 2014, but Sturgeon has argued the Brexit vote changed circumstan­ces because Scots voted overwhelmi­ngly against leaving the EU and they should not be dragged out against their will.

However, she had been under pressure to put off a new referendum because of her party’s weak performanc­e in a national election earlier this month.

She told the Scottish assembly she had listened carefully to those who were concerned about Brexit but had not wanted another independen­ce vote immediatel­y. She said a choice still needed to be offered, but the timing needed to be more cautious.

Brexit has strained relations between Britain’s four nations because Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to keep EU membership while England and Wales voted to leave.

May said on Tuesday that Sturgeon should take a demand for a second independen­ce referendum off the table.

“What I think Nicola Sturgeon should be saying today is that she’s going to completely take off the table the question of Indy Ref 2, a second independen­ce referendum in Scotland,” May told Sky.

 ??  ?? Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon during a Parliament session in Edinburgh on Tuesday. (Reuters)
Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon during a Parliament session in Edinburgh on Tuesday. (Reuters)
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