hm-atif-wafik

Brexit: UK-EU Trade Talks Continue As 'Sticking Points' Remain

The UK and EU have resumed negotiations on post-Brexit trade, with a minister telling the BBC that despite time running out, there is still a deal to be done"

Secretary of the Environment George Eustice said there were "sticking points" on fishing and business laws.

UK chief negotiator Lord Frost will take part in talks in Brussels with EU counterpart Michel Barnier.

EU sources told the BBC an agreement on fishing was close but a No 10 source said there had been "no breakthrough".

The UK government source told the BBC on Sunday evening: "Nothing new has been achieved on this today."

A senior EU diplomat told the BBC that fishing "was definitely not the issue the talks are stuck on".

The diplomat added there was still a dispute over what measures there should be to ensure a "level playing field" for businesses on both sides and how to enforce agreed standards.

Ireland's foreign minister has said it is "in everybody's interest" to reach an agreement soon.

Border checks and taxes will be introduced for goods travelling between the UK and the EU if a trade deal is not reached and ratified by the end of the year.

Eustice told BBC One's Andrew Marr Show: "There's still a deal to be done, but there's no denying that the end of last week was quite a setback."

He added: "The sticking points remain - quite fundamental ones. We've been clear all along that we can only do an agreement if it respects our sovereignty."

Eustice also said: "I think we probably are now in the final few days in terms of deciding whether there can be an agreement."

Arriving in Brussels, Lord Frost said: "We're working very hard to try and get a deal. We're going to see what happens in negotiations today."

Sunday's meeting follows talks between Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Saturday.

In a joint statement afterwards they said fishing rights, competition rules and how any deal would be enforced were still causing problems, and that "no agreement is feasible if these issues are not resolved".

They have agreed to talk again on Monday evening.

Brexit - The basics

Brexit occurred, but the rules did not change at once on 31 January, the UK left the European Union, but politicians needed time to negotiate a lifetime compromise afterwards - they got 11 months.

Talks are underway again the United Kingdom and the EU have until 31 December to agree on a trade agreement and on other issues, such as fishing rights.

If there is no deal: Border checks and taxes will be introduced for goods travelling between the UK and the EU. But deal or no deal, we will still see changes

Speaking to Ireland's Sunday Independent newspaper, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said: "We are more likely to get a deal than not because I think it's in everybody's interest."

He added that reports the EU had hardened its negotiating stance at France's behest were inaccurate.

But Eustice said revised demands from the bloc on fishing rights last week meant talks had "gone backwards".

He added the UK was "asking for a normal type of trade agreement such as the one [the EU] put together with Canada" and that this was "really not too much to ask".

Barnier tweeted after Saturday's statement was published, saying: "We will see if there is a way forward."

But, even if the two sides agree on a deal, there are still obstacles to overcome.

It will be necessary for any agreement to be transformed into a legal text and translated into all the languages of the EU, then ratified by the European Parliament.

It is possible that the UK government will pass legislation incorporating aspects of the agreement reached that MPs will be able to vote on.

For Labour, Rachel Reeves, Minister of the Shadow Cabinet Office told the Andrew Marr Show the government "has to deliver" an offer, but before backing or opposing it, her party will "have to see the content"

An agreement will also need to be approved by the 27 EU national parliaments - depending on the actual substance of the contract.

The week to come

And on Monday, the UK Internal Market Bill will return to the House of Commons.

Certain clauses could allow the government to break international law, by overriding elements of the original treaty with the EU for Brexit - the withdrawal agreement.

The EU is unhappy with it, as is the House of Lords, which voted to scrap those clauses of the bill.

But the government still supports its steps, which could trigger tensions in the trade negotiations, and on Monday night it is supposed to drive them through the Commons.

The Taxation (Post-Transition Period) Bill, which includes further powers to breach the withdrawal agreement's legal requirements, will return to the Commons this week as well.

Subscribe Shampratik Deshkal Youtube Channel

Topic : Global Brexit

Comments

Shampratik Deshkal Epaper

Logo

Address: 10/22 Iqbal Road, Block A, Mohammadpur, Dhaka-1207

© 2024 Shampratik Deshkal All Rights Reserved. Design & Developed By Root Soft Bangladesh