The meeting held this Thursday between the Foreign Ministers of Spain and England, Jose Manuel Albares And David CameronIt is finished, after six hours of negotiations and despite the optimism expressed by the head of Spanish diplomacy at the meeting, without agreement about him Status of Gibraltar after Brexit. However, both parties assured that there was “important progress”that the agreement is “closer” and the goal is to seal future agreements “as soon as possible”.
The vice president of the European Commission also participated in the meeting, just like a month ago when they first met in the same format, Maros Sefcovicand chief minister Batu, Fabian Picardo. “Today’s discussions took place in a constructive atmosphere, with important progress and new agreements. All parties are confident that an agreement is close and will work together closely and quickly on outstanding areas towards a comprehensive agreement between the EU and the UK. “The meeting reaffirmed their shared commitment to achieving an EU-UK agreement,” said The joint statement approved by Brussels, London, Madrid and Gibraltar.
The goal, as reflected in the text, is “to provide confidence, legal security, and stability.” to the residents of the region “protecting and improving the economy, trade, mobility, environment and social welfare while safeguarding the legal position of all parties” They stated this, urging themselves to ‘remain in close and constant contact’. This is the second four-way meeting that has been scheduled. since last April 12, when the same four protagonists cross the doors of Berlaymont, the headquarters of the European Commission, to try to give him final push on a never-ending agreement. On that occasion, the meeting lasted much shorter, around three hours, and ended with an agreement on this matter “general political line” the most sensitive element of negotiations: the airports, asset management and mobility (referring to border control.
Constructive and positive meeting
This Thursday is a priori called the last day. An example is Minister Albares’ optimism when entering the Commission building. “I don’t see any obstacles on our part to be able to move towards an agreement (on Gibraltar),” he stressed, confident of the possibility of a closure this Thursday “for sure.” A commitment. “We have achieved important progress and we continue to build and advance the political path agreed on April 12,” he said after a meeting he described as “constructive and positive.” “We have agreed, as we did on April 12, to maintain the same way of working,” he continued.
This means that until the agreement is completely completed, do not provide details “to protect what has been agreed and continue to advance aspects that still require more technical development,” he said without explaining what obstacles were preventing the agreement from being realized. white smoke in Brussels. “It’s no good for one party that we want to address it and the other party rejects it. It is simply a matter of bringing positions closer to the final point (…) There is no issue in which any of the parties refuses, excludes or there is a frontal refusal to reach an agreement. “In some aspects we still need greater technical position adjustments,” he stressed.
Commissioner Sefcovic also did not want to specify what the obstacles were and only stated that he hoped for a solution “as soon as possible,” said the man from Slovakia. “There is no deadline but tomorrow we will continue working,” Albarres confirmed that, as he said, they would hold “permanent meetings” at all levels. “It is clear that we have all expressed our strong commitment to the ultimate goal.” “namely reaching an agreement for a region of shared prosperity with Gibraltar, the Campo de Gibraltar, and creating a new relationship based on trust and prosperity.”
Spain and the UK signed a pre-agreement at the end of December 2020 to allow the implementation of possible Rock of EU policies and programs remove the fence while a future agreement is being negotiated following the UK’s exit from the EU (although Rock voted overwhelmingly against it). That continues to be the goal, as Albares reiterated, a few days ago in the presence of the mayor Campo de Gibraltar to guarantee transit of 15,000 Spanish workers which crosses the Rock every day and reaches “the well-being of 300,000 Andalusian residents and thousands of cross-border workers who represent more than 50% of the Rock’s workforce.”
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