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Merkel warns UK against Brexit ‘illusions’ as EU toughens strategies

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Berlin: Germany’s Angela Merkel told Britain on Thursday it should have no “illusions” it would retain the rights of an EU member after Brexit, hardening the tone ahead of a summit of the remaining 27 nations.


“A third-party state will not have the same rights or even superior rights to a member state,” the German chancellor told parliament two days before the meeting in Brussels.


“This may sound self-evident, but I have to say this clearly because some in Britain seem to have illusions on this point,” she said. “That would be a waste of time.”


The leaders of the other 27 EU nations have stressed a united stance as they plan to meet on Saturday to set down the bloc’s “red lines” — although the talks will not begin until June, after Britain’s election. “The negotiations will be very demanding, without a doubt,” said Merkel, the leader of the biggest EU economy.


British Prime Minister Theresa May’s spokesman, in a brief reaction, said only that London was approaching the negotiations “in a constructive spirit and with enormous goodwill”.


The EU has toughened its strategy, making new demands over financial services, immigration and the bills Britain must settle before ending its 44-year-old membership of the bloc.


Britain will also be required to give EU citizens permanent residency after living there for five years, in a challenge for May’s Conservative government, which has vowed to limit immigration.


The EU’s latest draft negotiating guidelines, agreed on Monday, seek to ensure Britain does not get a better deal outside the bloc than inside.


According to the document seen by AFP, the other EU countries will seek to hold Britain liable for the bloc’s costs for at least a year after it leaves in 2019 — longer than was previously proposed.


Merkel said that talks from the very start must include Britain’s financial obligations, including after Brexit.


She said these issues must be resolved first in a “satisfactory” way before negotiations turn to Britain’s future relations with the bloc — a sequence Merkel called “irreversible”.


“Without progress on the many open questions regarding the exit, including the financial questions, it doesn’t make sense to hold parallel talks on the details of a future relationship,” she said.


May, after starting the Article 50 process of leaving the EU last month, is seeking to shore up her mandate for the Brexit talks in a snap election on June 8. Polls suggest her Conservatives will return with an increased majority. A new survey, by YouGov for The Times newspaper, meanwhile for the first time signalled more people now believe the Brexit vote was a mistake, by a 45-43 per cent margin.


May hosted a working dinner on Wednesday with key EU Brexit negotiators, including European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker.


EU ministers were meanwhile meeting in Luxembourg to prepare the ground work for Saturday’s meeting. — AFP


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