UK PM Theresa May to ask lawmakers to vote on a second Brexit referendum

Theresa May said her government will include in her Withdrawal Agreement Bill a requirement for lawmakers to vote on whether to hold another Brexit referendum. (AFP)
Updated 22 May 2019
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UK PM Theresa May to ask lawmakers to vote on a second Brexit referendum

  • May is offering concessions in what she says is a “last chance” to secure British departure
  • May said she was 'making a new offer to find common ground in Parliament'

LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May said her government will include in her Withdrawal Agreement Bill a requirement for lawmakers to vote on whether to hold another Brexit referendum.

“I recognise the genuine and sincere strength of feeling across the House on this important issue,” May said. "The government will therefore include in the Withdrawal Agreement Bill at introduction a requirement to vote on whether to hold a second referendum."

“So to those MPs who want a second referendum to confirm the deal - you need a deal and therefore Withdrawal Agreement Bill to make it happen,” May said.

May is offering concessions in what she says is a “last chance” to secure an orderly British departure from the bloc.

The deal that she struck with the EU has been rejected by UK lawmakers three times already.

Since then, she has tried to secure backing from lawmakers with promises to maintain high standards on workers' rights and environmental protections — issues that are priorities for the left-of-center opposition Labour Party.

She also said UK lawmakers would get to decide how close a trade relationship to seek with the EU after Brexit, in a concession to Labour's demands for a customs union.

May said she was “making a new offer to find common ground in Parliament.”

“I have compromised. Now I ask you to compromise too,” she said.

May has said that after Parliament votes on the bill she will set out a timetable for her departure as Conservative leader and prime minister. Pro-Brexit Conservatives blame May for the country's political deadlock and want to replace her with a staunch Brexit supporter such as Boris Johnson, a former foreign secretary.

(With agencies)


Bangladesh backtracks on initial interest to join Trump’s Gaza stabilization force

Updated 5 sec ago
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Bangladesh backtracks on initial interest to join Trump’s Gaza stabilization force

  • Bangladesh currently faces various pressures from US, former ambassador says
  • Main parties contesting upcoming election distance themselves from government’s decisions

DHAKA: Facing domestic backlash, Bangladesh has backtracked on its initial interest in joining the US-planned military force in Gaza, with the interim administration saying it would leave the decision to the government appointed after next month’s polls.

The possibility of Bangladesh joining the International Stabilization Force — a part of US President Donald Trump’s controversial Gaza peace plan — was floated by National Security Adviser Khalilur Rahman last week, during his visit to Washington D.C., where he said he had “expressed Bangladesh’s interest in principle” to join it.

The announcement was immediately met with criticism from civil society at home, where any move perceived as undermining Bangladesh’s support for the Palestinians is unlikely to be popular.

Following the pushback, the country’s top diplomat, Foreign Affairs Adviser Touhid Hossain, told reporters on Wednesday that “no decision has yet been made” and that the caretaker Cabinet — which is overseeing Bangladesh until new leadership takes office after the February vote — “will not do anything … that the next government would need to completely reverse.”

Bangladesh will hold general elections on Feb. 12, and the main two parties contesting it — the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami — have already distanced themselves from the caretaker government’s decisions.

“We will not blindly adhere to any policy that has been adopted by this interim government,” Nawshad Zamir, BNP’s international affairs secretary, told Arab News, while Jamaat’s spokesperson, Ahsanul Mahboob Zubair, said the party would “not take any such steps that violate the UN and existing international laws and stand in contrast to our people’s aspirations.”

While the UN’s approach to Trump’s plan is equivocal, the international force has been rejected by Palestinian groups in Gaza as a “form of deep international partnership in the war of extermination waged by the (Israeli) occupation against our people.”

More than 71,400 Palestinians have been killed and 171,000 wounded as a result of Israeli attacks since the start of its war on Gaza in October 2023, according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health. The true death toll is feared to be much higher, as many people have died due to injury and lack of access to healthcare and food  — caused by the Israeli military’s destruction of Gaza’s infrastructure, and the blocking of medical aid and food.

Most of the Muslim countries which took part in a US-organized Gaza summit in Sharm El-Sheikh in October and initially considered joining Trump’s stabilization force have either pulled out of the plan or postponed announcing their decision.

Bangladesh’s sudden expression of interest came as a surprise as it had neither been part of the Sharm El-Sheikh meeting nor historically involved in Middle Eastern politics.

Humayun Kabir, former Bangladeshi ambassador to the US, linked it to the current pressures Bangladesh was facing from the Trump administration, including increased taxation of remittances and visa restrictions.

“In this context, I think Bangladesh has expressed its interest to join the US-led Gaza force in a bid to neutralize these pressures to some extent,” Kabir told Arab News.

But the political cost of actually following through could be too high for those who would decide to implement it.

“The people of Bangladesh have unconditional support for Palestine,” Kabir said. “In this backdrop it would be politically difficult for the government to go for anything that goes against the interests of the Palestinians.”

For political scientist Prof. Amena Mohsin, Bangladesh’s involvement in the force would be against its longstanding position of solidarity.

“We can’t go against our long-held positions regarding Palestine. We shouldn’t get involved in any controversy initiated by the Western powers,” she said.

“I don’t think any decision of this kind would be popular or get people’s support in Bangladesh.”

Shahidul Alam, a prominent photographer and Time Magazine Person of the Year 2018, said it would be “betrayal.”

Alam, who last year represented Bangladesh in the Freedom Flotilla Coalition to break Israel’s illegal siege of Gaza, said that he understood there was geopolitical pressure on Bangladesh but participating in “this sham of a peacekeeping force” would be a shameful act that Bangladeshis would never live down.

“This so-called stabilization force is not about peace,” he said. “It is about disarming resistance. It is about legitimizing occupation. It is about finishing what bombs could not: the complete subjugation of a people who refuse to surrender their right to exist in dignity.”