Friday, April 19, 2024 | Shawwal 9, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Only ‘miracles’ can move Brexit forward: EU tells UK

1121047
1121047
minus
plus

TALLINN: Only “miracles” can move Brexit talks far enough to fulfil Britain’s hopes of launching discussions next month on its future ties with the European Union, the head of the European Commission said on Friday. Prime Minister Theresa May had been hoping to use an informal EU meeting in the Estonian capital Tallinn to harness what she describes as renewed goodwill over Brexit to push the talks beyond the terms of the divorce, now just 18 months away.


Britain had aimed to make a breakthrough at a summit in Brussels on October 19-20.


Two years have been set aside for the Brexit talks and Britain risks crashing out of the 28-state bloc on March 29, 2019, without a deal on future trade terms.


But Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the EU executive and long a bogeyman for some in Britain’s eurosceptic press, said the first stage of talks on the rights of expatriates, the UK border with EU member Ireland and the financial settlement when Britain leaves had not gone far enough.


“By the end of October, we will not have sufficient progress,” Juncker told reporters in Tallinn, a day after his chief negotiator ended the last round of Brexit talks.


“At the end of this week, I am saying that there will be no sufficient progress from now until October unless miracles will happen.”


His words were echoed by other leaders.


Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said both sides would need “a small miracle” to make the required progress before the summit.


Irish leader Leo Varadkar said it was “still very evident that there’s more work to be done”.


Their views will be a blow for May, who wants to move quickly on to discussion of the future trade relationship and a transitional arrangement — part of the deal Britain says is needed before any kind of financial settlement can be agreed.


In Tallinn, May sidestepped questions over whether she was confident of the October deadline.


After three months of talks, which have become bogged down in a spat over the divorce bill, the British prime minister tried to reset the tone with a speech a week ago in Florence.


She had hoped to speak directly to EU leaders and reassure them that Britain was not picking unnecessary fights, going so far as to make concessions on the future role of the European Court of Justice and on the Brexit bill.


“I made that speech to give momentum to the talks and I think we have seen that being shown in the talks that have taken place this week, and further progress has been made,” May said early on Friday.


Pressing her case, she met German Chancellor Angela Merkel on the sidelines of the Tallinn summit and repeated her pledge for Britain to be “the strongest friend and partner to the EU” after Brexit, her spokeswoman said.


Merkel said there had been progress, but that there was also a lot of work to do before October. “Altogether it was a very constructive talk,” Merkel told a news conference at the end of the summit. ‘I think that the Florence speech helped to bring a new dynamic into the negotiation process.”


May also held talks with Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo, who is concerned about the 800,000 Poles living in Britain.


Both agreed on “the importance of reaching an early settlement on citizens’ rights”, May’s spokeswoman said. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon