2016年6月30日星期四
No single-market access for UK
EU leaders agreed Wednesday that Britain cannot have access to the single market after leaving the union without accepting the bloc's rules on free movement, president Donald Tusk said.
"There will be no single market a la carte," Tusk told a news conference in Brussels after the 27 leaders met without British Prime Minister David Cameron, AFP reported.
"Leaders made it crystal clear today that access to the single market requires acceptance of all four freedoms including freedom of movement," Donald Tusk added.
The 27 EU leaders will also hold a summit - without Britain - in Bratislava on September 16 to discuss further the fallout from Britain's decision to leave the bloc, Tusk said.
The summit will come just days after Britain's ruling Conservative party is due to choose a successor to Cameron, who resigned on Friday after his country voted in a referendum to leave the EU by 52 percent to 48.
"This was a first exchange so it is too early to draw conclusions. This is why we started a political reflection with 27 states and we'll meet on September 16 in Bratislava to continue our talks," Tusk said.
The former Polish premier stressed that negotiations on Britain's future relationship with the EU cannot start until it formally triggers the two-year process leading to a divorce.
Cameron has said this is a task for his successor.
Tusk meanwhile said at the "calm and serious" discussion -- the first EU talks without a British leader present for 40 years -- they agreed it was a "serious moment in our common history." Leaders are absolutely determined to remain united, he added.
Acting Spanish Premier Mariano Rajoy on Wednesday said Madrid would oppose any separate talks with Scotland on its future in the EU after Britain voted to leave the bloc.
"The Spanish government is opposed to any negotiations with anyone else but the British government. The UK leaves and with it, all those who make up the UK," Rajoy said after the meeting.
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