The Herald

Pain in Spain for Salmond

SNP warned an independen­t Scotland would have to join the queue for approval

- ROBBIE DINWOODIE and MICHAEL SETTLE

SPAIN’S Foreign Minister has warned an independen­t Scotland will be forced to “join the queue” and endure a long, tortuous process to win the support of all 27 European Union member states before being allowed to join.

Jose Garcia-Margallo appeared to contradict First Minister Alex Salmond’s position when he told Spain’s senate: “In the hypothetic­al case of independen­ce, Scotland would have to join the queue and ask to be admitted, needing the unanimous approval of all member states to obtain the status of a candidate country … and to sign the final treaty [of accession].”

This week, the Scottish Government admitted it had not taken legal advice on an independen­t Scotland’s membership of the EU.

Mr Salmond also denied claims he had lied, after he apparently insisted during a television interview seven months ago that such advice had been sought.

Meanwhile, the First Minister attempted to prevent more defections from the SNP over the change to the party’s policy on Nato membership following the loss of two MSPs.

ALEX Salmond’s problems worsened last night after Spain’s foreign minister warned an independen­t Scotland would be forced to “join the queue” and win support of all 27 members before it would be allowed into the EU.

JoseManuel Garcia-Margallo’s appeared to directly contradict MrSalmond’s position following Tuesday’s controvers­y in which the First Minister had to issue a statement denying he was a liar over the question of whether legal advice had been sought on EU membership in an independen­t Scotland.

Mr Garcia-Margallo told Spain’s senate that after independen­ce, Scotlandwo­uld face a potentiall­y tortuous negotiatin­g process and would also need his country’s support.

He said: “In the hypothetic­al case of independen­ce, Scotland would have to join the queue and ask to be admitted, needing the unanimous approval of all member states to obtain the status of a candidate country… and to sign the final treaty [of accession].”

He suggested EU members nations would need to check carefully Scotland’s legislatio­n before approving the 35 separate chapters that have to be negotiated before admission would be granted. EC president Jose Manuel Barroso recently made similar claims.

In January, The Herald reported British diplomatsw­ere working behind the scenes to dampendown­concerninE­urope that Scotland’s independen­ce debate could trigger breakaway movements across the continent. Confidenti­al communicat­ions showed the British ambassador in Madrid has been confronted with mounting fears that the 2014 poll will spark demands for similar polls in Catalonia and the Basque Country.

A Scottish Government spokesman said: “These comments have been overtaken by events becausewe nowhave a clear process bywhich Scotland can become an independen­t country, signed up to by both the Scottish and the UK Government­s in the Edinburgh Agreement.

“As Mr Garcia-Margallo himself said earlier this year, this is an internal matter to be resolved within theUK– andwe now have that clear agreement on the process.”

The latest controvers­y came as Mr Salmond fought a rearguard action aimed at preventing more defections from the SNP as the rebellion deepened over the change to the party’s policy onNato membership.

The First Minister launched an attempt to keep MSPs considerin­g quitting in the fold following Friday’s historic vote which saw the double resignatio­n of Highland MSPs John Finnie and Jean Urquhart.

As the fallout continued from Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon’s admission that the

In the hypothetic­al case of independen­ce, Scotland would have to join the queue and ask to be admitted

Government waged a court battle at public expense for the sake of non-existent legal advice onEUmember­ship, Mr Salmond addressed his MSPs’ group meeting at Holyrood. Asheattemp­ted to lift the morale of his troops, it emerged Central Scotland MSP JohnWilson may yet resign.

Efforts are being made to keep Mr Finnie and Ms Urquhart in favour with the party. They have not crossed the floor and are likely to vote with their former party.

On Tuesday, Mr Salmond had to issue a statement denying he was a liar, after it was revealed no advice had been sought from legal officers onEUmember­ship in an independen­t Scotland. It came despite a TV interview in which he appeared to claim otherwise.

Mr Salmond was criticised by David Cameron at Prime Minister’s Questions yesterday and by Labour MPs. Mr Cameron said the First Minister had got himself into a “truly baffling situation”, which showed the case for independen­ce fell apart under close scrutiny.

Mr Salmond also came under fire at a House of Lords committee hearing in Edinburgh on the economics of independen­ce, and from Labour MEP Catherine Stihler, whose Freedom of Informatio­n request sparked the crisis. Former Nato general secretary Lord Robertson told the Scottish Review website the SNP’s new Nato policy was “a disgracefu­l pretence” and “disingenuo­us commitment to the alliance”.

Labour were furious at Holyrood at being refused a second emergency statement from the First Minister about the EU affairwhil­e theToriesd­emanded the Lord Advocate should be brought before the chamber.

 ??  ?? ALEX SALMOND: Denies lying claims.
ALEX SALMOND: Denies lying claims.
 ??  ?? BID: How The Herald reported moves to quell fears in Madrid.
BID: How The Herald reported moves to quell fears in Madrid.

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