The Herald (South Africa)

Brexit no-deal risk real – UK’s Hunt

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Britain’s new foreign minister Jeremy Hunt warned on Monday on his first official visit to Germany that failure to secure a Brexit deal could harm European ties for decades to come.

After talks with his German counterpar­t Heiko Maas in Berlin, Hunt said complacenc­y could lead to Britain crashing out of the EU without a roadmap for future ties.

“When it comes to Brexit, there is now a very real risk of a Brexit no-deal by accident.

“This is because I think that many people in the EU are thinking they just have to wait long enough and Britain will blink and that is not going to happen,” he said.

Hunt, who took over from Boris Johnson after his resignatio­n this month, said “without a real change in approach from the EU negotiator­s, both sides could be left struggling to maintain trade and security ties.

“That would be incredibly challengin­g economical­ly.

“Britain would find that challengin­g, but we would find a way not just to survive but to thrive economical­ly,” he said.

“But my real concern is that it would change British public attitudes to Europe for a generation and it would lead to a fissure in relations which would be highly damaging for that great partnershi­p we’ve had for so many years, that has been so important in sustainA ing the internatio­nal order.”

Maas insisted Germany, too, had an interest in maintainin­g the closest ties possible with Britain post-Brexit, while stressing that only the European Commission had the power to negotiate the terms.

“We, the German government, don’t want a disorderly Brexit, we want a deal,” he said.

“We know that everyone is going to have to take steps toward the other to reach an agreement.

“I hope the British government and the commission in Brussels can succeed in sealing a deal that can win a majority in the House of Commons in London but also in the European Parliament in Brussels.”

Maas said Britain and Germany would work together on a bilateral “strategic paper” on foreign policy for the postBrexit period to ensure as much continuity as possible.

Britain is set to leave the European Union on March 30.

The two sides want to strike an initial withdrawal agreement by late October, to give parliament enough time to endorse it, before reaching a broader deal on their future relationsh­ip.

However, negotiatio­ns have stalled over a range of thorny issues and the commission, the EU’s executive arm, has warned remaining member states and businesses to step up preparatio­ns for no deal. –

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