Bangkok Post

Trade talks possible if progress on divorce

-

VALLETTA: The European Union demanded that Britain make “sufficient progress” on its divorce before any talks on a future trade deal can start as it laid out its tough Brexit negotiatin­g plans yesterday.

EU president Donald Tusk’s draft guidelines say the other 27 countries are ready for a transition­al deal after Britain’s exit in March 2019, but that such an arrangemen­t would have to be under EU rules.

British Prime Minister Theresa May had in her letter triggering the two-year exit process on Wednesday called for talks on the divorce and a future deal to run in parallel as soon as negotiatio­ns start.

The EU has proclaimed its unity on Brexit, even as it reels from Britain’s intention to become the first member state to leave in the bloc’s 60-year history.

Mr Tusk’s strategy will now be sent out to the leaders of the 27 remaining EU countries ahead of a special summit on April 29 when they will agree on them so that talks can start in May.

Germany and France had already set out a united and uncompromi­sing stance against Ms May’s demands.

Tusk’s guidelines say that the EU called for a “phased approach” that prioritise­s an orderly withdrawal that reduces the disruption caused by Britain’s departure in March 2019.

“The European Council will monitor progress closely and determine when sufficient progress has been achieved to allow negotiatio­ns to proceed to the next phase” on a future relationsh­ip,” the draft guidelines say.

The EU said that no trade deal can be agreed on before Brexit takes effect.

But it is also open to a transition­al arrangemen­t after Brexit as a “bridge” to a future deal some years down the line, but said that it would have to be under EU rules.

It said it is making preparatio­ns in case talks break down.

Mr Tusk gave a news conference in Malta with Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, whose country holds the EU’s rotating presidency, to discuss the strategy.

The EU’s chief negotiator, France’s Michel Barnier, is expected to get the green light to start talks with Britain on May 22, an EU official said.

Ms May formally notified the EU of Britain’s intention to leave in a letter to Tusk on Monday that diplomats described as surprising­ly conciliato­ry in tone for the most part.

But Ms May’s warning in the letter that failure to clinch a deal on trade would affect Britain’s cooperatio­n on terrorism and security still rankled with many.

“It’s not a threat,” Brexit minister David Davis told BBC radio after warnings from Brussels against using security as a bargaining chip in the talks.

The EU insists it is unified ahead of the negotiatio­ns.

“Brexit is not the end of everything, but we must make it a beginning of something that will be new, stronger and better,” European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said in Malta on Thursday.

French President Francois Hollande followed German Chancellor Angela Merkel in snubbing Ms May’s proposed structure for the negotiatio­ns, saying the exit agreement should come first.

The fate of three million EU citizens living in Britain and one million British people within the bloc’s nations is at the top of leaders’ agenda.

Also looming large is the so-called “exit bill” which Britain will have to pay, estimated to be as much as €60 billion, and the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

EU leaders hope to resolve those issues by the end of the year before moving on to the future relationsh­ip and a possible transition.

But that leaves only 10 months before October 2018 when Mr Barnier says the talks must wrap up to give time for the European Parliament and member states to approve what the negotiator­s come up with.

In the first signs of a business fallout since Ms May’s Brexit notificati­on, the prestigiou­s Lloyd’s of London insurance market said it would open a new Brussels subsidiary to ensure smooth operations in the EU.

Britain has meanwhile started laying plans for the daunting task of bringing thousands of items of EU regulation into British law on the day that Britain leaves the EU.

But Ms May is struggling to bring unity in the wake of the divisive Brexit referendum last June that saw 52% vote in favour of leaving the EU and 48% against.

As well as fears for the Northern Irish peace process from a return of a hard border, the referendum result has also led to a renewed campaign for independen­ce in pro-EU Scotland.

 ?? AP ?? President of the European Council Donald Tusk, right, is greeted by the Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat ahead of their joint news conference.
AP President of the European Council Donald Tusk, right, is greeted by the Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat ahead of their joint news conference.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand