Categories: CoronavirusWorld News

EU Tells UK Post-Brexit Deal Vital During COVID-19 Crisis

 

The European Union’s chief Brexit negotiator told Britain on Sunday that the economic damage wrought by the coronavirus crisis made it especially important the sides reach a new trade deal.

EU and UK negotiators will enter a fourth and last scheduled round of talks this week that could determine if a comprehensive new agreement is struck by the year-end deadline.

Britain formally left the other 27 EU nations in January but still largely operates as if it were a member of the bloc.

It also continues making contributions to the EU budget — a reality that particularly upsets Brexit supporters.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has vowed not to extend the talks past the current deadline — something he must do by the end of June — and the prospects of a broad new deal look bleak.

Chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier told The Sunday Times that London and Brussels could afford to make the economic situation even worse by breaking off their nearly 50-year partnership without arrangements for what comes next.

– ‘Three steps back’ –

“If we don’t get an agreement then that will have even more consequences. And then of course those will be added to the already very serious consequences of the coronavirus crisis,” Barnier said.

“So I think that we have a joint responsibility in this very serious crisis, which affects so many families… with so many deaths, so many people sick, so many people unemployed… to do everything we can to reach an agreement and I very much hope that we will do so.”

READ ALSO: 100-Year-Old Indonesian Woman Beats COVID-19

The previous round of talks ended in acrimony in May.

Johnson is expected to work out the best way forward with EU chiefs Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel at a summit held shortly before the June deadline to extend the talks by up to two years.

READ ALSO: 100-Year-Old Indonesian Woman Beats COVID-19

The European Union is willing to offer Britain preferential trade terms if Johnson signs up to the major standards and regulations followed by the remaining members of the bloc.

Johnson’s team argues that the whole point of Brexit was to give Britain the right to set its own rules.

Barnier accused UK negotiators of reneging on the commitments Johnson signed up to in a non-binding political declaration that accompanied the sides’ formal divorce deal.

“The UK has been taking a step back — two steps back, three steps back — from the original commitments,” Barnier told The Sunday Times.

“The UK negotiators need to be fully in line with what the prime minister signed up to with us.”

AFP

Anthonia Orji

Disqus Comments Loading...
Share
Published by
Anthonia Orji

Recent Posts

Gabon’s Post-Coup Reform Efforts Under Fire

Mounting calls for the dialogue to be postponed or reorganised have been heard from a…

9 mins ago

Faye Officially Declared Winner Of Senegal’s Presidential Election

The announcement of the official provisional results seems to clear the way for a handover…

9 hours ago

Nigerians Deserve To Know How Abducted Kaduna Pupils Were Released – Bukarti

The security expert said the government needs to explain to Nigerians circumstances around the release…

10 hours ago

Minimum Wage: Pay FAAC Allocations Of Defaulting States To Workers, TUC Tells FG

While the TUC demanded N447,000 as the new monthly minimum wage per worker, the NLC…

11 hours ago

 Slain Soldiers’ Sacrifice Won’t Be In Vain, Justice Will Be Served — CDS 

General Musa vowed that the military will hunt down the perpetrators of the heinous act…

13 hours ago

PHOTOS: 17 Military Personnel Killed In Delta Buried

The President assured the families of the soldiers of maximum support and approved scholarship for…

13 hours ago