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Britain and EU reach historic deal on Brexit divorce terms

By   /  December 8, 2017  /  Comments Off on Britain and EU reach historic deal on Brexit divorce terms

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Brussels, Dec. 8 (PTI/AFP): Britain and the EU reached a historic deal today on the terms of the Brexit divorce after Prime Minister Theresa May rushed to Brussels for early morning talks.
The European Commission said it “recommends sufficient progress” had been made by Britain on separation issues including the Irish border, Britain’s divorce bill, and citizens rights.
The agreement paves the way for EU leaders at a summit on December 14-15 to open the second phase of Brexit negotiations, covering trade talks and a transition period.
Britain voted in June 2016 to become the first state to leave the EU, after more than four decades of membership, but the talks have been slow moving and often acrimonious so far.
“The Commission is satisfied that sufficient progress has been achieved in each of the three priority areas,” the European Commission said in a statement. Negotiators worked through the night to seal an agreement on the terms of Britain’s departure from the bloc.
The EU had set a deadline of Sunday after the last talks on Monday broke down when May’s Northern Irish allies objected to terms for future arrangements for the Irish border.
Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker’s chief of staff Martin Selmayr tweeted a picture of white smoke — the sign used by the Vatican to signify the election of a new pope — shortly after May’s arrival.
Juncker spoke first with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar then with May on Thursday night in a bid to break a deadlock over the wording of a deal on future arrangements for the Irish border. Britain agreed to pay a divorce settlement amounting to between 45 and 55 billion euros and to protect the rights of some three million European citizens living there after Brexit as part of the deal.
But Ireland’s demands that Brexit should not lead to the return of checkpoints on the border with Northern Ireland, which it said could jeopardise the peace process in the north, proved the biggest stumbling block at the end.
“In Northern Ireland we guarantee there will be no hard border,” May told a press conference with Juncker.
The pro-British DUP party which props up May’s government refused Monday’s draft deal over a phrase suggesting there would be “regulatory alignment” with the EU after Brexit — effectively putting Northern Ireland under EU law.
DUP leader Arlene Foster told Sky News there had now been changes following talks with May.
On Thursday, EU Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas had dismissed British newspaper reports that the Sunday deadline could be extended into next week as “not correct”.
Scotland’s nationalist leader showed little patience, accusing the British government of being “totally and utterly incompetent” on Brexit.
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said “the real lesson” of the past week was that Scotland “will always be at the mercy of reckless decisions taken by Tory governments at Westminster” unless it becomes independent.
Eurogroup chief Jeroen Dijsselbloem offered some calming words, saying Britain’s City of London financial hub “will not fall apart” after Brexit even if it loses the right to allow banks to trade freely across the bloc.
Dijsselbloem, the Netherlands finance minister who chairs meetings of his counterparts in the 19-country eurozone, said that some businesses would nevertheless have to relocate.
“I don’t believe that the City will fall apart and that everyone will flee. I don’t think that’s how it’s going to work,” he told a European Parliament committee.
His reassurances come at a time when Britain’s finance sector is anxious about losing the “passporting” rights which allow large international banks to trade throughout the EU while being based in Britain.

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  • Published: 7 mins ago on December 8, 2017
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  • Last Modified: December 8, 2017 @ 9:37 pm
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New Delhi/Mumbai, Dec. 8 (IANS): Dissident BJP Maharashtra leader Nana Patole, who has been publicly attacking Prime Minister Narendra Modi, announced on Friday that he had resigned from the Lok Sabha and quit the party too. Patole, elected from Bhandara-Gondiya, said he submitted his resignation to Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan’s office and also to the Bharatiya Janata Party leadership. He said he was “deeply anguished and felt let down by the party”. His brief resignation letter addressed to Mahajan read: “Respected Madam, I hereby tender my resignation of my seat in the House with effect from today i.e. 08/12/17.” The development is seen as a blow to the BJP, coming a day ahead of the first round of the Gujarat Assembly polls on Saturday. Patole, who has been highly critical of the BJP leadership in recent months, said he had quit the Lok Sabha and the party since he was “deeply anguished and felt let down by the party”. “The objectives with which I had joined the (BJP) party have been belied, but now (post-quitting) I am free of the turmoil in my mind,” Patole told the media shortly after submitting his resignation letter to the Lok Sabha Secretariat. He said he had not made up his mind on which party to join but would consider throwing his lot with “some like-minded” political outfit. In Mumbai, Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said he was yet to get full details on the matter and would “comment at the appropriate time”. Patole said that after taking power, the BJP had forgotten all its promises and assurances it made to the electorate. Patole, the first BJP to quit the party and the Lok Sabha after Modi took office in 2014, created a sensation when he told a public function that the Prime Minister does not like to be questioned and criticized. He also alleged that all central ministers “were always in a state of fear” and that he was “on the hit list but I am not afraid of anyone”. Earlier this week, Patole shared limelight with senior BJP leader Yashwant Sinha who led a farmers’ agitation in Akola for three days, which ended on Wednesday with Fadnavis agreeing to concede all seven major demands. Patole had earlier labelled the Modi government “deaf and blind” and accused it of allegedly favouring top industrialists and showing little concern for ordinary people including farmers.

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