European Union chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier says further Brexit guarantees could be agreed (AFP Photo/Aris Oikonomou) |
Paris (AFP) - The European Union is prepared to give Britain further Brexit guarantees to help a divorce deal through the British parliament, the bloc's chief negotiator Michel Barnier said in an interview published Saturday.
"We
can find guarantees to confirm, clarify, guarantee the goodwill and good faith
of the Europeans with commitments which would have real legal force,"
Barnier said in comments published in several European newspapers including Die
Welt in Germany and Les Echos in France.
Barnier
also suggested European leaders would be amenable to a short
"technical" delay in Britain's departure from the EU, scheduled for
March 29, to give the British parliament time to formally ratify a final
divorce deal.
The British
parliament rejected the original Brexit deal hammered out by Prime Minister
Theresa May and EU leaders.
The major
sticking point was the so-called "backstop" plan for the Irish
border. Some MPs fear the arrangement, which would keep Britain tied to EU trade
rules until another way is found to keep the frontier open, is a
"trap" that could bind it to European commerce rules indefinitely.
Barnier
said there was "misunderstanding" over the proposed backstop deal.
"Limiting
it in time or introducing a unilateral exit clause would call into question its
credibility," the EU's top Brexit negotiator insisted.
The
backstop "will end either when we have a global agreement on the future
relationship, or a specific agreement with Ireland," he said, assuring it
"was never the wish" to bind Britain to European trade rules
indefinitely.
Meetings
next week
Barnier
said he would Britain's Brexit minister Stephen Barclay and Attorney General
Geoffrey Cox next week to discuss options.
A Brussels
source said those talks could take place in the Belgian capital on Tuesday.
"There
is a way that the British (parliament) could vote, between now and March 12,
with these guarantees of our good faith, It will be up to them to fulfil their
responsibilities," Barnier said.
In 2017,
Britain invoked Article 50 of EU law, triggering a two-year countdown to Brexit
that ends at 11pm (2300 GMT) on March 29.
The country
is on course to leave without an agreement after British MPs in January
overwhelmingly rejected the divorce deal May struck with the EU late last year.
The
embattled leader is now seeking changes to the pact which she hopes will be
enough to get it through parliament by March 12.
In a
revised strategy unveiled this week, May vowed that if her deal is rejected,
lawmakers will vote in the following days on whether to leave without a deal or
delay Brexit.
But
European leaders have warned any postponement would come with conditions.
Barnier
suggested a short delay could be acceptable.
"The
European institutions will do whatever is necessary on their side but the
British have told us in the past that they will need two months to ratify"
the deal.
"It
would then require a simple technical extension."
While
Britain is yet to request a delay, "I don't think there would be any
objections in principle" from the other 27 EU nations, Barnier said.
However,
any delay "must serve to solve a problem, not merely to postpone it and
remain at an impasse."
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