Cape Times

Withdrawal agreement sees orderly Brexit

Top EU officials say new partnershi­p with UK has to be built

- JOSEP BORRELL and MICHEL BARNIER Borrell is the European Union’s high representa­tive/vice-president of the European Commission, and Barnier is the European Commission’s head of Task Force for Relations with the UK

ON January 31, 2020, the UK left the EU. We lost a member of our family. It was a sad moment for us, for European citizens – and, indeed, for many British citizens.

Neverthele­ss, we have always respected the sovereign decision of 52% of the British electorate, and we now look forward to starting a new chapter in our relations.

Emotions aside, February 1 turned out to be historic but also undramatic. This is largely thanks to the Withdrawal Agreement that we negotiated with the UK, which enabled us to secure “an orderly Brexit”. One that – at least for now – minimises disruption for our citizens, businesses, public administra­tions – as well as for our internatio­nal partners.

Under this agreement, the EU and the UK agreed on a transition period, until the end of 2020 at least, during which the UK will continue to participat­e in the EU’s Customs Union and single market, and to apply EU law, even if it is no longer a member state. During this period, the UK will also continue to abide by the internatio­nal agreements of the EU, as we made clear in a note to our internatio­nal partners.

So, with the transition period in place, there is a degree of continuity. This was not easy given the magnitude of the task.

By leaving the union, the UK automatica­lly, mechanical­ly, legally, leaves hundreds of internatio­nal agreements concluded by or on behalf of the union, to the benefit of its member states, on topics as different as trade, aviation, fisheries or civil nuclear co-operation.

We now have to build a new partnershi­p between the EU and the UK.

That work will start in a few weeks, as soon as the EU27 have approved the negotiatin­g mandate proposed by the European Commission, setting out our terms and ambitions for achieving the closest possible partnershi­p with a country which will remain our ally, our partner and our friend.

The EU and the UK are bound by history, by geography, culture, shared values and principles and a strong belief in rules-based multilater­alism. Our future partnershi­p will reflect these links and shared beliefs. We want to go well beyond trade and keep working together on security and defence, areas where the UK has experience­s and assets that are best used as part of a common effort.

In a world of big challenges and change, of turmoil and transition, we must consult each other and co-operate, bilaterall­y and in key regional and global forums, such as the UN, the World Trade Organisati­on, Nato or the G20.

It is perhaps a cliché but the basic truth is that today’s global challenges – from climate change, to cybercrime, terrorism or inequality – require collective responses.

The more the UK is able to work in lockstep with the EU and together with partners around the world, the greater our chances of addressing these challenges effectivel­y.

At the very core of the EU project is the idea that we are stronger together; that pooling our resources and initiative­s is the best way of achieving common goals. Brexit does not change this, and we will continue to take this project forward as 27.

Together, the 27 member states will continue to form a single market of 450 million citizens and more than 20 million businesses.

Together, we remain the largest trading bloc in the world.

Together, at 27, we are still the world’s largest developmen­t aid donor.

Our partners can be sure that we will stay true to an ambitious, outward-looking agenda – be it on trade and investment, on climate action and digital, on connectivi­ty, on security and counter-terrorism, on human rights and democracy, or on defence and foreign policy.

We will continue to live up to our commitment­s. We will continue to stand by the agreements that link us to our 10 strategic partners, including South Africa, as well as our other internatio­nal, regional and bilateral partners, and we will continue to develop multilater­al co-operation frameworks around the world.

The EU will continue to be a partner you can trust. A steadfast defender of rules-based multilater­alism, working with our partners to make the world more secure and fair.

 ??  ?? BRITAIN’S Queen Elizabeth II departs after a church service at St Peter and St Paul in West Newton, Norfolk, Britain, yesterday. | Reuters
BRITAIN’S Queen Elizabeth II departs after a church service at St Peter and St Paul in West Newton, Norfolk, Britain, yesterday. | Reuters
 ?? | AP ?? BREXIT supporters celebrate during a rally in London. Britain left the European Union after 47 years, leaping into an unknown future. The writers says the EU and the UK have to build a new partnershi­p.
| AP BREXIT supporters celebrate during a rally in London. Britain left the European Union after 47 years, leaping into an unknown future. The writers says the EU and the UK have to build a new partnershi­p.

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