Tag: EU

  • Austria rejects EU proposal on jobs for asylum seekers

    The EU should not give asylum seekers access to labour markets as this would attract additional migrants, Austrian Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka said on Thursday.

    He rejected a proposal by the European Commission to grant the asylums work permit.
    “Granting work permits to asylum seekers is unthinkable.

    “It would amount to a call to people in crisis countries to come to Austria. Our domestic job market would not be able to handle it,” Sobotka said.

    The EU executive had on Wednesday unveiled measures aimed at cracking down on asylum seekers who abuse EU rules to seek out the most generous countries.

    The plan also included a rule that labour market access must be given within six months after an asylum seeker files his protection claim and within three months if the application looks to be well-founded.

    More than 1 million refugees and migrants reached Europe in 2015.

    Austria received 90,000 asylum claims last year and has reacted by adopting increasingly restrictive immigration policies.

  • Putin, Netanyahu,  EU officials, others speak

    Putin, Netanyahu, EU officials, others speak

    Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday thanked former British Prime Minister David Cameron in a valedictory message and congratulated his successor Mrs. Theresa May.

    A Kremlin statement yesterday said Putin thanked Cameron for cooperation and quoted him as saying “I hope that your rich political experience will be in demand in the future, both in the United Kingdom and in the international community.”

    To Mrs. May, who has succeeded Cameron, Putin “stressed the conviction that the preservation and augmentation of the significant potential of Russian-British cooperation in various fields that has been accumulated for a long time is in the fundamental interests of the two countries.”

    Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he has sent his congratulations to Britain’s new leader.

    A statement from Netanyahu’s Office yesterday said he sent a letter to Mrs. May with his well-wishes.

    The statement also said Netanyahu spoke to Cameron. He thanked him for “standing beside Israel, the good relations and the strengthening of ties” during his six-year leadership.

    European Union (EU) officials yesterday congratulated British Prime Minister Mrs. Theresa May. They said that Britain and Brussels will have to move soon to address the consequences of the country’s vote to leave the bloc.

    Head of the EU’s Executive Commission Jean-Claude Juncker wished Mrs. May “every success in the task ahead.”

    He wrote to the prime minister yesterday: “The outcome of the United Kingdom’s referendum has created a new situation which the United Kingdom and the European Union will have to address soon. I look forward to working closely with you on this and to learn about your intentions in this regard.”

    Martin Schulz, the European Parliament’s President, wrote on Twitter: “Leadership issue settled, now I expect we work quickly to deliver certainty.”

  • Cameron bows out with jokes

    Cameron bows out with jokes

    David Cameron entertained parliament with a series of farewell quips on Wednesday in his last appearance as prime minister before making way for Theresa May to lead the monumental task of extricating Britain from the EU.

    “This morning I had meetings with ministerial colleagues and others.

    “Other than one meeting this afternoon with Her Majesty the Queen, the diary for the rest of my day is remarkably light,’’ Cameron said to roars of laughter in a packed House of Commons.

    He was due to present his resignation to the queen at Buckingham Palace at around 1600 GMT.

    Then May will pay her own visit to the monarch to be formally entrusted with the job, before entering 10 Downing Street to become Britain’s second woman prime minister after Margaret Thatcher.

    Meanwhile Cameron stepped down after Britons rejected his entreaties and voted in a June 23 referendum to quit the EU, weakening the 28-nation bloc and creating huge economic uncertainty.

    Apart from the task of executing ‘Brexit’, May must try to unite a divided party and a nation in which many, on the evidence of the vote, feel angry with the political elite.

    There was an atmosphere of hilarity in parliament as Cameron traded humorous jabs with beleaguered opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn,in spite of the serious backdrop.

    “I am beginning to admire his tenacity; he is reminding me of the black knight in Monty Python’s Holy Grail.

    “He is been kicked so many times but he says ‘Keep going, it is only a flesh wound, I admire that,’’ Cameron said.

    He took the opportunity to trumpet his government’s achievements in generating one of the fastest growth rates among western economies, chopping the budget deficit, creating 2.5 million jobs and legalising gay marriage.

    However his legacy would be overshadowed by his failed referendum gamble, which he had hoped would keep Britain at the heart of a reformed EU.

  • EU earmarks N2.03tr for  Nigeria, others’ EPA devt

    EU earmarks N2.03tr for Nigeria, others’ EPA devt

    The Commissioner for Industry and Private Sector Promotion at the Economic Community of West Africa States (ECOWAS) Commission, Mr. Kalilou Traore yesterday said the European Union (EU) and its member states have set aside  6.5 billion euros (about N2.03trillion) to support West Africa’s Economic Partner Agreement (EPA) Development Programme  for the next five years.

    He added that the partners have committed to jointly fund the development dimension of EPA for at least 20 years through trade liberalisation in West Africa and also improve the subsidy of processed products for export.

    According to him, 20 countries have already signed EPA in the sub region except Nigeria and The Gambia.

    But the Minister of State for Industry, Trade and Investment, Hajiya Aisha Abubakar yesterday in Kano said the Federal Government refused to sign EPA because it was taking its time to come out from its current economic challenges.

    Hajiya Aisha who spoke during a one-day sensitisation seminar on EPA organised by the EU and the ECOWAS held at the Grand Central Hotel, said: “Nigeria and Gambia withheld their signatories to the agreement due to some identified issues of national importance that needed to be addressed.”

    The minister said the delay in signing EPA is not an attempt to undermine the efforts of the ECOWAS Commission as well as the EU on  EPA but rather based on the need to address the economic challenges Nigeria is currently facing.

    “We need sometime to consult further with  the relevant stakeholders and agree on the next step, while our gathering today is a step forward towards finalising on Nigeria’s position,”she said adding that trade agreements are too critical to be concluded and signed in a hurry.

    “It became imperative that we reflect deeply on the trade liberalisation deal with the EU and its long-term impact on the continent’s efforts towards industrialisation and job creation; we need to leverage our abundant natural resources and large market to develop our industries,” she added.

    She also emphasised the need to create jobs, “for our people, increase intra-African trade and achieve regional integration objective. Africa is on the rise and it is a very big and strategic market for any trading partner.

    “We should diversify our economies, move away from export of raw materials by encouraging value-added export through industrialisation and have a better share of the global market.”

    Also speaking at the event, the Head of EU delegation in Nigeria and ECOWAS, Mr. Michel Arrion who expressed worry over the delay in signing EPA by Nigeria, said: “Nigerian government seems to have some reservation over the signing of the agreement.

  • Brexit: EU warns UK on freedom of movement

    There can be no pick and choose single market for the United Kingdom, European Union leaders have warned, after meeting in Brussels to discuss Britain’s vote to leave the bloc.

    Jean-Claude Juncker, President of the European Commission, said anyone seeking access to the EU’s market must adhere to criteria “without exception.”

    There could be “no negotiation without notification,” he said.

    The German and French leaders and European Council President, Donald Tusk said the same, the BBC reports.

    Mr. Tusk said there would be another meeting of EU leaders, excluding the UK, on September 16 in Bratislava to discuss so-called “Brexit.”

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel also reiterated that there would be no discussions with the UK until Article 50 was formally triggered by the UK government.

    “We wish that that would happen as soon as possible,” she said.

     

  • EU intensifies push for Nigeria to endorse EPA deal

    EU intensifies push for Nigeria to endorse EPA deal

    The European Union (EU) has continued its push to get Nigeria to endorse the controversial Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA).

    It said with globalisation, Nigeria cannot live in isolation as it will hurt her economy.

    Speaking at a dialogue session on Nigeria International Trade Relations organised by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI), Head of Trade & Economics at the EU to Nigeria and West Africa, Fillippo Amato, said Nigeria has nothing to fear as far as EPA was concerned.

    He said the EU has shown goodwill with the release of 12 million euro to support the enhancement of the National Quality Infrastructure, to improve quality, safety, integrity and marketability of Nigerian goods and services.

    He wondered how smaller African countries,  such as Ghana, Rwanda, Gambia, Cameroun, Mauritania and the Southern African countries have signed on as a result of improved quality of production as against Nigeria with her large population.

    On how Nigeria can tap into the European market, Amato said it is only through improvement of her production processes.

    Nigeria is already loosing so much by the rejection of beans and other export products to the EU because of the presence of a pesticide known as dichlorvos, which is harmful to health. Amato regretted that more than 70 per cent of beans exported to the EU from Nigeria contained pesticide.

    The EU boss however, stated that that EU is working with the relevant government agencies to address the problem. Some of the agencies include Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), and Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) among others.

    LCCI President Mrs. Nike Akande said no country is fully self-sufficient, urging the government to come out with consistent and

    sustainable policies on trade relations.

    “Our huge population is a plus for investors. Return on Investment (RoI) is one of the highest globally, but as a country we need to strengthen our competitiveness by creating an enabling environment on the supply side,” Akande said.

  • EU rejects informal talks with UK

    The European Union will not hold informal talks with the United Kingdom until it triggers Article 50 to leave, Germany, France and Italy have insisted.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel hosted talks with French President Francois Hollande and Italian Prime Minister, Matteo Renzi, in Berlin, the BBC reports.

    The leaders called for a “new impulse” to strengthen the EU.

    Last Thursday, British citizens voted 52-48 in favour of leaving the EU in a historic referendum.

    UK financial markets remain volatile in the wake of the vote, with sterling plunging to a 31-year low against the dollar, and some share trading temporarily halted.

    Together with the UK, Germany, France and Italy have the largest economies in the EU.

    All three leaders voiced regret at the UK’s vote to leave, with Mrs. Merkel calling it a “very painful and regrettable decision.”

    “We are in agreement that Article 50 of the European treaties is very clear – a member state that wishes to leave the European Union has to notify the European Council,” Mrs. Merkel told the joint news conference at the German chancellery.

    “There can’t be any further steps until that has happened. Only then will the European Council issue guidelines under which an exit will be negotiated.

    “That means that, and we agree on this point, there will be neither informal nor formal talks on a British exit until the European Council has received the [UK’s] request for an exit from the European Union.”

  • UK’s exit from EU: Consequences for Nigeria, Africa and the Commonwealth

    UK’s exit from EU: Consequences for Nigeria, Africa and the Commonwealth

    Publisher of Africa Today Kayode Soyinka writes on what implications the exit of United Kingdom’s from the European Union (EU) will have on Nigera, Africa and the Commonwealth 

    I will be seeing many gloomy faces around the table in some meetings I will be attending in the United Kingdom (UK) in the next couple of days and months. The outcome of the European (EU)-membership referendum is totally unexpected and therefore shocking. The deed has been done. Prime Minister David Cameron took the greatest political gamble of his life. He took the risk to derive political advantage and he has failed embarrassingly and woefully.

    It is therefore right, in my view, that he should resign and allow someone else to navigate the messy process that will eventually exit the UK from the EU. What we have seen played out here is the clash of two different generations – the older, what I would call the “Empire Generation”, who still look at the United Kingdom as if she’s still the colonial, imperial power of the past, dominating the entire world. The flag-waving “Rule Britannia” generation who prefer their island mentality and would like the UK to be truly “independent” and have nothing to do with Brussels that they so much loath and view with contempt for wanting to impose a federal system on them, which they detest and believe has no relevance, and of no use to them in today’s world.

    This generation voted unequivocally to exit, not necessarily having given a serious thought to the consequences of their action. That might only just be dawning on them now after the deed has been done! Whereas the younger generation and the more educated ones prefers to be in Europe because of the advantages, especially of globalisation, and realising that their island nation-state of only about 65 million people, in this time and age, cannot afford to continue to be an island on its own – it has to reach out, engage diplomatically, relate and trade with other nations around the world. I believe Britain will on the long term survive the attendant repercussions or consequences of the decision it has taken to leave the EU. The country was not entirely taken by surprise with the decision to leave.

    For instance, it has, for some time now, been working on contingency plans on what to do if the votes should go against remaining in the EU. Immigration staffs, for instance, have, for some time now, been going through retraining on new approach to immigration if the decision is to exit – a decisive factor in the way they voted. For what you may or may not know, if passports will have to be changed when the UK finally leaves the EU, one should not the surprised if the design of the new UK passport is now ready and only waiting to go to the printers. They are that well organised and leaving nothing to chances. And we have already heard from the proactive Governor of the Bank of England that a contingency plan had been in place in anticipation that the decision might be against remaining, which has been rolled out immediately the decision was known and confirmed.

    So I have no doubt that things will stabilise in the course of days, weeks and months to come. For us in Africa, especially Nigeria, the UK exiting from the EU could have both positive and negative repercussions, or consequences. When Prime Minister Ted Heath took the UK into what used to be known as the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1973, all powers pertaining to UK’s trade relations with the rest of the world were transferred to Brussels, and the UK started losing interest in its traditional allies in Africa and the Commonwealth generally. It started trading and investing more with her European cousins in the EEC than it used to with her old allies in Africa and the Commonwealth. Even if the UK had, for old time sake, wanted to continue trading directly with Africa and the Commonwealth after joining the EEC, it no longer could do that because it had surrendered that power and authority to the EEC. The only way it could work for the UK to continue trading indirectly with Africa, Caribbean and Pacific Commonwealth was the signing by the EEC of the Lome Convention, updated in the Cotonou Agreement and later the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). Therefore, exiting the EU in about two years time might help to reverse this situation. And here lies the opportunity for Africa to strike new trading deals with the UK directly, because by the time it leaves the EU in two years time, it would, as a country now on its own, have no trade agreement with any country in Africa or anywhere in the world for that matter! The UK would now have to start all over again and be able to decide on its own, who it would like to trade with, on what terms and not having to go through the bureaucracies of the EU trading bloc.

    Therefore, there are very serious consequences for Africa arising from UK’s exit from the EU. The continent now has at most two years to put new policies in place to deal with these consequences. For instance, Africa too can trade directly with the UK as it used to without going through the EU.

    Another advantage to Africa, apart from the fact that it would now have an opportunity to negotiate afresh new trade terms with the UK, is that the continent can still trade as economic/trading blocs – ECOWAS and SADC among others – directly with the EU as it does presently, and encouraged to do by the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

    Specifically, Nigeria should be delighted it still hasn’t signed the controversial Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the EU despite the fact that most of ECOWAS have been bamboozled to sign. Now that Nigeria’s most influential ally in the EU will now be exiting the organisation, that EPA, it would seem, is now dead and buried.

    President Muhammadu Buhari would have been ill-advised if he were to sign it in its present form. Nigeria (and indeed ECOWAS) should take advantage of the crisis within the EU as a result of UK’s imminent exit to negotiate a new trade agreement with the EU – maybe a preferential trade agreement. And, on the other hand, negotiate new trade terms directly with the UK when it eventually leaves the EU. Win-Win situation one might say for Nigeria, and indeed, Africa and the Commonwealth. On the down side, the UK exiting from the EU means that Nigeria, Africa and the Commonwealth have lost a very powerful ally and perhaps most influential voice that can speak on their behalf within the EU! And that is sad! Only two Commonwealth countries now remain as members of the EU – Cyprus and Malta – and even when lumped up together, and Malta soon take the rotational presidency of the EU, they still don’t have the gravitas and influence of the UK and therefore can’t speak effectively for Africa and the Commonwealth within the EU. But to compensate for that, the UK must now have to take the Commonwealth, especially its African members, more seriously, because the 52-nation Commonwealth constitute one-third of membership of the United Nations UN). The importance of having such bloc in the UN as ally cannot be lost on the UK. The UK will need Africa and the Commonwealth as allies in the UN, especially in times of trouble like this.

    On a final note, the decision to exit the EU, as we have seen, would inevitably thrust on the UK a new political leadership. That, in itself, might not necessarily be a bad thing – even though it was unplanned for. It is a big risk and serious gamble that the UK took, especially when one is reminded that the decision might have the added unpleasant repercussion of Scotland gaining independence and eventually leaving the UK itself – the Scots and Northern Ireland voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU. If Scotland should break away as it is threatening, that will be the end of the UK itself, leaving us only with Great Britain – possibly without the “Great”. But let us make no mistake about it; whether as UK or Britain, the “Brits” will still remain a powerful and influential political, economic and military powerhouse, traditional ally and friend to have.

    The next few months, and years, will be very fascinating in the UK and Europe.

  • Britain out of EU

    Britain out of EU

    With 51.8 per cent, Britain has voted to leave the European Union.

    The outcome of the referendum however showed that while England voted overwhelmingly for Brexit, Scotland and Northern Ireland backed favoured continuation as part of EU.
    17,410,742 persons voted to leave compared to 16,141,241 for Remain.
    A record number of Britons — almost 46.5 million — were registered to vote, and over 33.5 million cast ballots. In Scotland, where results were reported earlier than elsewhere, an overwhelming majority voted to Remain.
    But in England, where about 84% of the U.K.’s population of almost 65 million people live, the vote to leave was stronger in most areas. London was the outlier, with most boroughs voting to Remain.
    As initial results trickled in indicating a likely Leave vote, the sterling slid dramatically against the dollar, and stocks in Asian markets saw volatility with investors concerned about the effects of a “Brexit.”
    The Bank of England put out a statement Friday morning saying it would take “all necessary steps” to guarantee economic stability in the wake of the vote.

  • EU urges Nigeria to endorse EPA deal

    EU urges Nigeria to endorse EPA deal

    The European Union (EU) has continued its push for Nigeria’s endorsement of the controversial Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). The EU is contending that with globalisation, Nigeria cannot live in isolation for the sake of its economy.

    The propriety or otherwise of Nigeria signing the EPA has pitched manufacturers and other members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) against the EU. Most of them are insisting that signing the agreement as it is will hurt the manufacturing sector and the economy.

    But the EU does not buy their argument.

    At a dialogue session on Nigeria International Trade Relations, organised by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI), last week, Head of Trade & Economics at the EU to Nigeria and West Africa Fillippo Amato said Nigeria has nothing to fear about EPA.

    He said the EU has shown goodwill with the release of 12 million euros for the enhancement of the National Quality Infrastructure, to improve quality, safety, integrity and marketability of Nigerian goods and services.

    He said smaller African countries,  such as Ghana, Rwanda, Gambia, Cameroun, Mauritania and southern Africa, have signed on with improved quality of production, while Nigeria with a large population has not.

    On how Nigeria can tap into the European market, Amato said it is only through improvement in its production processes.

    Nigeria is loosing so much to the rejection of beans and other export products to the EU because of the presence of a pesticide, dichlorvos, which is harmful to health. Amato regretted that more than 70 per cent of beans exported to the EU from Nigeria contained the pesticide.

    Orya, however, stated that that EU is working with relevant agencies to address the problem. The agencies include the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC),  Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), and Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) among others.

    While noting that there is no short cut to standardization, he said Nigeria must do all within her means to improve on her products both for export and  internal consumption.  He said the EU has 100 per cent immediate market opening for products from West Africa and 75 per cent gradual market opening over a 20 year period for products from EU.

    LCCI President Mrs. Nike Akande while denouncing multiple charges on manufacturers by the regulatory agencies urged government on the need for diversification. She stated that no country is fully self-sufficient, urging the government to come out with consistent and sustainable policies on trade relations.

    “Our huge population is a plus for investors. Return on Investment (RoI) is one of the highest globally, but as a country we need to strengthen our competitiveness by creating an enabling environment on the supply side,” Akande said.