EU tells UK to ‘stop playing games’ on Brexit

Britain left the European Union on January 31, and will leave the bloc’s single market and customs union at the end of the year. (AFP)
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Updated 22 September 2020
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EU tells UK to ‘stop playing games’ on Brexit

  • ‘But please, dear friends in London: Stop the games. Time is running out’
  • UK government is pushing ahead with legislation designed to override parts of the Brexit deal

BRUSSELS: Senior EU and British officials will meet urgently next week on the Brexit withdrawal agreement, which has been threatened by London’s attempt to override parts of the treaty, Brussels said Tuesday.
“But please, dear friends in London: Stop the games. Time is running out,” Germany’s European affairs minister Michael Roth warned as he met colleagues in Brussels ahead of a summit of EU leaders on Thursday.
EU Commission vice president Maros Sefcovic said he would meet senior British minister Michel Gove in Brussels on Monday, just ahead of Brussels’ end-of-the-month deadline for London to drop a bill designed to rewrite the deal.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government is pushing ahead with legislation designed to override parts of the treaty, an act which it admits breaks international law, and Brussels is furiously defending the deal.
“The so-called Internal Market Bill worries us extremely, because it violates the guiding principles of the withdrawal agreement, and this is totally unacceptable for us,” Roth said.
Sefcovic said he would meet Gove as joint chair of the EU-UK Joint Coordination Committee overseeing the divorce agreement.
However, “we will not be renegotiating, but we are dedicated to its full and timely implementation – nothing more and nothing less.”
In parallel to the wrangling over the existing agreement, which Johnson signed last year and hailed as an “oven-ready” deal to get Britain out of Europe, EU and UK teams are negotiating a possible trade deal.
The EU leaders meeting Thursday will receive a “point of information” on progress in these talks, but for the moment have left the protracted debate in the hands of their negotiator, Michel Barnier.
The next round of trade talks begins on October 2 in Brussels. Johnson has set a mid-October deadline for success or failure, and EU officials say the deal must be done by the end of the month if it is to pass into law by the end of the year.
Britain left the European Union on January 31, and will leave the bloc’s single market and customs union at the end of the year. Experts fear economic chaos if no new trade deal can be agreed by then.
But the two sides are still divided on rules for a “level-playing field” of fair competition between companies, on state aid or subsidies for EU and UK firms and on access for EU boats to British fishing waters.
And the dispute about the withdrawal agreement has thrown a new spanner in the works. Johnson’s decision to use domestic law to overwrite parts the treaty with the EU has infuriated Brussels.


South Korea protests Japanese event over disputed islands

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South Korea protests Japanese event over disputed islands

SEOUL: South Korea on ‌Sunday protested a Japanese government event commemorating a cluster of disputed islands between the two countries, calling the ​move an unjust assertion of sovereignty over its territory.
In a statement, the foreign ministry said it strongly objected to the Takeshima Day event held by Japan’s Shimane prefecture and to the attendance of a senior Japanese government official, urging Japan to immediately abolish the ceremony.
The tiny ‌islets, known as ‌Takeshima in Japan and ​Dokdo ‌in South ⁠Korea, ​which controls ⁠them, have long been a source of tension between the two neighbors, whose relations remain strained by disputes rooted in Japan’s colonial rule of the Korean peninsula from 1910 to 1945.
“Dokdo is clearly South Korea’s sovereign territory historically, geographically and ⁠under international law,” the ministry said, calling ‌on Japan to ‌drop what it described as groundless ​claims and to face ‌history with humility.
The ministry summoned a top ‌Japanese diplomat to the ministry building in Seoul to lodge a protest.
A person at Japan’s foreign ministry said no one was available on Sunday to comment. ‌A call to the Prime Minister’s Office went unanswered. The government sent a ⁠vice-minister ⁠from the Cabinet Office, not a cabinet minister, to the ceremony.
Seoul has repeatedly objected to Japan’s territorial claims over the islands, including a protest issued on Friday over comments by Japan’s foreign minister during a parliamentary address asserting Tokyo’s sovereignty over the islets.
The territory lies in fertile fishing grounds and may sit above enormous deposits of natural gas hydrate that could be worth ​billions of dollars, ​Seoul has said.