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  Home > Europe


Brexit: EU Demands 'Serious UK Response' On Citizens' Rights


Donald Tusk wants a serious response from the UK

 


 May 1st, 2017  |  10:02 AM  |   1835 views

EUROPE

 

European Council President Donald Tusk has called on the UK to come up with a "serious response" on what will happen to EU citizens in Britain after Brexit.

 

"We need guarantees," he said in Brussels as 27 EU leaders backed the bloc's Brexit negotiating guidelines.

 

The rights of EU citizens to live, work and study in the UK is one of three topics they want dealt with in the first phase of Brexit talks.

 

Negotiations will start after the UK election on 8 June.

 

Mr Tusk put citizens' rights centre stage at a news conference after EU leaders - minus UK PM Theresa May - nodded through the guidelines in a matter of minutes.

 

"Over the past weeks, we have repeatedly heard from our British friends, also during my visit in London, that they are ready to agree on this issue quickly," he said.

 

"But I would like to state very clearly that we need real guarantees for our people to live, work and study in the UK.

 

"The same goes for the Brits," living on the European continent, he continued.

 

UK citizens living in EU countries and non-UK EU citizens living in Britain are estimated at 4.5 million.

 

The EU's negotiating guidelines, first proposed by Mr Tusk in March, list citizens' residency rights, settling Britain's financial commitments to the EU and avoiding a "hard" border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland as the three top issues needing agreement in what are termed "separation talks".

 

Only once "sufficient progress" is made on these topics can talks touch on the UK's future relationship, including any trade deal, with the EU.

 

The UK government, however, has pushed for parallel negotiations on trade.

 

Applause

 

Speaking after the summit, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker again stressed that separation talks could not run in parallel with talks on a future trade deal with the UK, backing the line taken by German Chancellor Angela Merkel as she arrived in Brussels.

 

EU officials said leaders burst into applause as the negotiating stance was waved through at the summit.

 

EU leaders and officials were keen to stress the EU's unified position on Brexit. Chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, said: "We are ready... we are together."

Speaking earlier, French President François Hollande said there would inevitably be "a price and a cost for the UK - it's the choice that was made".

 

"We must not be punitive, but at the same time it's clear that Europe knows how to defend its interests, and that Britain will have a weaker position in the future outside Europe, than it has today within Europe."

 

On the issue of the UK's financial obligations, EU officials estimate that Britain faces a bill of €60bn (£51bn; $65bn) because of EU budget rules. UK politicians have said the government will not pay a sum of that size.

 

Britain certainly won't tamely accept that it has to pay a huge divorce bill - but it's likely to find the Europeans united on the concept if not the precise amount, the BBC's Kevin Connolly in Brussels says.

 

UK Brexit Secretary David Davis said in response that both sides wanted the negotiations to be conducted with goodwill.

 

But he added: "There is no doubt that these negotiations are the most complex the UK has faced in our lifetimes. They will be tough and, at times even confrontational".

 


 

Source:
courtesy of BBC NEWS

by BBC News

 

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