Skip to content

Britain Opens EU Trade Talks With a Threat to Walk Away

  • World

Iranian Vice President Contracts Coronavirus: State Media

Masoumeh Ebtekar, Iran’s vice president for women and family affairs, contracted the COVID-19 coronavirus, according to state-run media. Ebtekar, who was also an English-language spokesperson for Iran during the 1979 hostage situation, is suffering from mild symptoms and wasn’t hospitalized, said state media, CBS News reported. She one of several Iranian officials to have contracted the virus. The death toll from COVID-19 in Iran has risen to 26 while 245 people have contracted the virus, health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said in a statement carried by state-controlled IRNA. The country is the hardest-hit in the Middle East, and many of its neighbors have closed their borders to travel and suspended flights. Iran has shut down schools, universities, and canceled public gatherings to combat the disease’s spread. The majority of the…

Britain Opens EU Trade Talks With a Threat to Walk Away

LONDON—Britain laid out its opening demands for upcoming trade talks with the European Union on Feb. 27, including a blunt threat to walk away from the negotiating table if there’s no progress within four months.

The two sides appear headed for a rocky first round of negotiations as they try to forge a new relationship following the UK’s departure from the now 27-nation bloc.

Britain and the EU both say they want to reach a free trade agreement, but have starkly divergent views on how it should be overseen and what constitutes fair competition between the two economies.

The EU says Britain must agree to follow the bloc’s rules in areas ranging from state aid to environmental protections, and give European boats access to UK fishing waters if the two sides are to strike a good deal.

But the UK is demanding the right to diverge from the bloc’s rules in order to strike new trade agreements around the world and to give the British government a freer hand to intervene in the UK economy.

“In pursuit of a deal we will not trade away our sovereignty,” Michael Gove, the minister in charge of Brexit preparations, told lawmakers in the House of Commons.

“We will not be seeking to dynamically align with EU rules on EU terms, governed by EU laws and EU institutions.”

That conflict will be one of the big hurdles in talks, which are due to begin on March 2 in Brussels. Fishing is likely to be another flashpoint. EU nations—especially France—want Britain to grant European boats long-term access to UK waters. Britain wants to negotiate fishing quotas annually.

Britain left the EU on Jan. 31 but remains bound by the bloc’s rules until a post-Brexit transition period ends on Dec. 31. A divorce agreement between the two sides allows for the transition to be extended for two more years, but British Prime Minister Boris Johnson insists he will not agree to that.

That leaves the two sides just months to seal a wide-ranging deal.

Britain’s negotiating guidelines insist that there is “limited, but sufficient time” to get an agreement. The document says a “broad outline” of an agreement should be done by June. It warns that if there is not sufficient progress by then, the UK could walk away and focus on “domestic preparations to exit the transition period in an orderly fashion.”

Johnson’s conservative government says that with or without a trade deal, the UK will be leaving the bloc’s structures—including its single market for trade in goods and services—as of Jan. 1, 2021.

Britain hopes by then to have a trade agreement with the bloc similar to the one struck between the EU and Canada. Such a deal would eliminate tariffs and quotas on trade in goods, but it’s less clear what it would mean for the services sector, which makes up 80 percent of Britain’s economy.

The UK also aspires to strike side agreements in areas including fisheries, law enforcement, and judicial cooperation. It confirmed, however, that Britain will withdraw from the European Arrest Warrant system, which allows for speedy extradition of criminal suspects. Senior UK police officers have warned that this will make their job harder.

The British government is warning businesses that no matter what happens, there will be new barriers between Britain and the EU, which currently accounts for almost half of UK trade. Even with a free trade deal, there will be new border checks and customs forms to fill out.

Allie Renison, head of Europe and Trade Policy at the Institute of Directors business group, expressed disappointment that “securing market access continuity seems to be less than a fundamental priority.”

She said that for most of the group’s members, “maintaining ease of trade with the single market is more important than being able to diverge from EU regulations.”

Britain’s tough talk is unlikely to impress EU negotiators, who already accuse Johnson of trying to water down commitments Britain made in the divorce deal that paved the way for the country’s seamless departure on Jan. 31. That withdrawal agreement dealt with three broad issues—citizens’ rights after Brexit, Britain’s liabilities after 47 years of membership, and the need to keep people and goods flowing freely across the border between EU member Ireland and Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK.

The two sides have agreed to maintain an open border by keeping Northern Ireland aligned to EU rules even if the rest of the UK diverges. But recent comments by Johnson’s government seeming to downplay the significance of that agreement have set off alarm bells among EU leaders.

Behind the hard rhetoric, the two sides do have room for agreement. Britain has promised it won’t undercut the EU by lowering standards on environmental protection, food hygiene, or workers’ rights.

“We’re not going to engage in some race to the bottom,” Johnson said.

But Britain won’t agree to let the EU be the judge of whether it is living up to those commitments. The challenge for negotiators will be to find a way to make that commitment binding that both sides can agree on.

Former British trade negotiator David Henig said both Britain and the EU appeared “too optimistic” in their conflicting opening gambits.

“Which is fine at this stage. As long as we’re aware we won’t, in fact, get all we want. As the EU won’t,” he wrote in the Daily Telegraph.

In Brussels, EU spokeswoman Dana Spinant said she “wouldn’t want to jump to conclusions about the outcome” of talks.

“However, the commission maintains its capacity to prepare for a no-deal [UK exit]” even as it prepares for “a positive result of those negotiations,” she said.

By Jill Lawless

This article is from the Internet:Britain Opens EU Trade Talks With a Threat to Walk Away

‘Seeing Patients Die One by One’: Doctor in Coronavirus-Stricken City in China Recounts Harrowing Experience

“There are so many deaths. The mortality rate of patients in critical condition is about 80 percent, and the mortality rate of patients in severe condition is 20 percent,” said doctor Chen, who is treating the ill in one of the cities hard-hit by the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak in China. In an exclusive interview with The Epoch Times on Feb. 27, Chen discussed what he saw and experienced in the city of Ezhou, about 50 miles east of Wuhan, where the outbreak first emerged. Both cities are within Hubei province. Chen is a young doctor dispatched from another province to Ezhou to help treat the large numbers of COVID-19 patients there. As a doctor with a lot of experience treating patients with respiratory diseases in intensive care units (ICU)…