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Britain’s May seeks to cut deal on future EU ties in Brussels

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BRUSSELS: British Prime Minister Theresa May arrives in Brussels to try to agree a blueprint on post-Brexit ties with the European Union, which the bloc’s diplomats said was being held up by disagreements over Gibraltar, fisheries and trade.


All EU leaders are due to meet on Sunday to rubber-stamp their Brexit deal, consisting of Britain’s withdrawal agreement and an outline of the two sides’ new relationship after Britain exits the EU.


The fate of the withdrawal accord is uncertain. British lawmakers are stepping up a fight over the terms of departure, with some trying to open the way for the country to change course.


While the EU is trying to discourage Britain from any renegotiation of the nearly 600 pages of dense legal text that forms the agreement, some of the remaining 27 member states also have issues with it.


Attempting to address those issues in ongoing talks that will outline future ties, national EU envoys of the 27 states met in Brussels on Tuesday.


“Still some work is needed on three aspects: fish, goods and Gibraltar,” one diplomat said of the meeting, held before May meets with Jean-Claude Juncker, the head of the EU’s executive. “Juncker and May will try to sort it out tomorrow.” “Spain does have a very real problem on Gibraltar,” said another diplomat.


Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez threatened to vote against the overall Brexit accord on Sunday unless it makes clear that the future of the disputed British territory of Gibraltar would be settled through direct talks between Madrid and London.


Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Borrell insisted on Wednesday that Madrid wanted assurances on the peninsula from the withdrawal agreement, which was published last week, and the political declaration, which has not yet been distributed.


“We will not give our agreement until we have seen both and we are assured that they make clear that the negotiations between the United Kingdom and the European Union will not include Gibraltar, that this would be a separate negotiation which Spain would need to agree on,” Borrell told lawmakers.


Many in Brussels said they thought Sanchez was trying to score points with voters at home before a looming domestic election. They said the issue could be solved by the leaders and warned Madrid not to push so far as to put the whole Brexit agreement at risk.


“We are following the latest developments with growing concern,” said a third EU diplomat after Madrid said it would want changes to the already-negotiated divorce deal.


“No one wants to reopen the withdrawal agreement.” Within the EU, a withdrawal treaty is adopted by qualified majority and not unanimity, so a single state like Spain cannot block it. — Reuters


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