Gibraltar: Foreign Secretary travels to UK-Gibraltar Joint Ministerial Council
Monday, 29 March 2021 13:40
UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will today, 29 March, attend the
UK-Gibraltar Joint Ministerial Council and hold bilateral talks
with the Gibraltar Chief Minister Fabian Picardo. During the visit,
the Foreign Secretary will reaffirm the UK’s commitment to reaching
agreement on a future treaty between the UK and EU in respect of
Gibraltar. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said:...Request free trial
UK Foreign Secretary will
today, 29 March, attend the UK-Gibraltar Joint Ministerial
Council and hold bilateral talks with the Gibraltar Chief
Minister Fabian Picardo.
During the visit, the Foreign Secretary will reaffirm the
UK’s commitment to reaching agreement on a future treaty
between the UK and EU in respect of Gibraltar.
Foreign Secretary said:
As a valued member of the UK family, we stand side by
side with Gibraltar as we enter into the forthcoming
negotiations with the EU on Gibraltar’s future
relationship.
We are committed to delivering a treaty which safeguards
UK’s sovereignty of Gibraltar and supports the prosperity
of both Gibraltar and the surrounding region.
The UK-Gibraltar Joint Ministerial Council is the highest
negotiating forum for ministers to come together and
discuss matters of shared importance. The Joint Ministerial
Council (Gibraltar EU Negotiations) was originally formed
to discuss the UK’s exit from the European Union, but has
come into its own as a forum for agile discussion between
the UK and Gibraltar across the range of shared interests.
Background
- As a result of the position taken by the EU, Gibraltar
was not covered by the UK-EU Trade and Cooperation
Agreement.
- The UK, working side by side with the Government of
Gibraltar, reached a political agreement with Spain on 31
December 2020 on a framework for Gibraltar’s future
relationship with the EU.
- This framework provides the basis for a treaty between
the EU and UK regarding Gibraltar. The European Commission
are currently developing their own mandate for the
negotiation of a Treaty. This will then need to be agreed
by the European Council before negotiations begin.
- The key issue for the negotiation is border fluidity -
maintaining mutually beneficial fluidity of movement for
people and also of goods between Gibraltar and the
surrounding region.
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