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Spain, Britain agree to keep Gibraltar land border open


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Spain, Britain agree to keep Gibraltar land border open

By Clara-Laeila Laudette

 

2020-12-31T152527Z_1_LYNXMPEGBU0OK_RTROPTP_4_BRITAIN-EU-SPAIN-GIBRALTAR.JPG

FILE PHOTO: The Rock of Gibraltar is pictured from La Linea de la Concepcion, southern Spain, December 21, 2020. REUTERS/Jon Nazca/File Photo

 

MADRID (Reuters) - Spain and Britain reached a preliminary agreement on Thursday to keep the Gibraltar land border open, just hours before Britain's full exit from the European Union.

 

As part of the agreement, Gibraltar, a British Overseas Territory located on Spain's southern tip, will remain part of European Union agreements such as the Schengen Area, Spanish Foreign Minister Gonzalez Laya said.

 

All the details of the agreement will be settled between Spain and Britain during a six-month transition regarding the territory, she told reporters.

 

"Spain, as member state representing the Union, will be responsible for enforcing Schengen and will be assisted by (EU border agency) Frontex for around four years, conducting controls both in Gibraltar's port and airport," Laya said.

 

Gibraltar was not part of a last-minute deal for Britain's post-Brexit relationship that was reached between Britain and the European Union last week.

 

Without Thursday's agreement, tens of thousands of Spaniards and Gibraltarians who cross everyday would have been forced to go through checks and passport stamping, the Spanish foreign minister said.

 

Spain still claims sovereignty over the port at the mouth of the Mediterranean which it ceded to Britain in 1713 after a war.

 

Laya said Thursday's initial agreement safeguarded both countries "renounceable aspirations of sovereignty."

 

Some 99% of Gibraltarians rejected any idea of Britain sharing sovereignty with Spain in a referendum in 2002. However they voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU in Britain's 2016 referendum on Brexit.

 

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson hailed the agreement in a a tweet.

 

"I wholeheartedly welcome today’s political agreement between the UK and Spain on Gibraltar’s future relationship with the EU. The UK ... will remain totally committed to the protection of the interests of Gibraltar and its British sovereignty," he said.

 

The Schengen Area is a 26-country zone covering most of the European Union, and a handful of non-EU members, where internal borders have been abolished and people move freely between countries.

 

(Reporting by Clara-Laeila Laudette; Editing by Inti Landauro and Frances Kerry)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2021-01-01
 
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1 hour ago, mrfill said:

Gibraltar is not, and never has been, part of the EU. It is a British Overseas Territory.

wikipedia:

"Gibraltar is not part of the UK, but contrary to all other British Overseas Territories was a part of the European Union like the UK. It participated in the Brexit referendum and it ceased, by default, to be a part of the EU upon the UK's withdrawal."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effect_of_Brexit_on_Gibraltar

 

17 minutes ago, CorpusChristie said:

Johnson didnt hail this was a victory

he hailed it, according to the piece. Did he hail it as a defeat? (A bit like Brexit and all the other tosh from him).

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4 minutes ago, Disparate Dan said:

 

 

he hailed it, according to the piece. Did he hail it as a defeat? (A bit like Brexit and all the other tosh from him).

 

  No, he didnt claim it was either a victory or a defeat .

"All the tosh from him" , whilst making false claims about him "hailing a victory" ????

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7 hours ago, nausea said:

Do we need Gibraltar? I can understand the Falklands, like natural resources and all that, but Gibraltar; Napoleon died a long time ago, is the mediterranean really of any significance? 

 

Give it back to Spain, and watch the Spaniards sell it to the Chinese.

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4 hours ago, Disparate Dan said:

how Johnson can hail this as a victory is beyond imagining. UK citizens flying into La Linea will be subject to Schengen-area controls just as if they were entering at Madrid, operated by Spanish. Gib remains part of the EU despite its British "sovereignty".

So not all bad news then. 

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11 minutes ago, shy coconut said:

Quite right old boy, just like Hong Kong.......

Actually Gibraltar was nothing like Hong Kong.

 

Hong Kong was on a 150 year lease and Gibraltar was won in a battle with Spain. Spain won Gibraltar in a war with the Moors.

 

So if Gibraltar is given to anybody it should be given to the Moors who, at that time, had conquered most of Spain.

 

Perhaps Spain should be ceded to the Moors as well.

Edited by billd766
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2 hours ago, billd766 said:

So if Gibraltar is given to anybody it should be given to the Moors who, at that time, had conquered most of Spain.

Requested & Demanded a very long time ago by Muslims and recently by Osama Bin Laden...in theirs Dreams; Reconquer “Al-Andalus”.

Edited by Tarteso
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On 1/1/2021 at 8:24 AM, herfiehandbag said:

Virtually the entire population want to remain British. That must count for something?

Then I guess it's mostly posturing on Spain's part, why would they want to import another separatist problem. With such widespread public support for maintaing the British relationship, I guess it ain't gonna happen anytime soon. But my question is what do we gain by this? N.Ireland, Scotland, Wales, I can understand; like you want to maintain influence on your immediate borders (cf. Russia and the Crimea, the US and Cuba, or China and Tibet, just to give a few examples that spring to mind), but some island in the mediterranean that lost it's strategic importance to the, now, non-existent British Empire some time ago?

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23 hours ago, billd766 said:

Actually Gibraltar was nothing like Hong Kong.

 

Hong Kong was on a 150 year lease and Gibraltar was won in a battle with Spain. Spain won Gibraltar in a war with the Moors.

 

So if Gibraltar is given to anybody it should be given to the Moors who, at that time, had conquered most of Spain.

 

Perhaps Spain should be ceded to the Moors as well.

And England given back to the Vikings (their descendants) who conquered large parts of it.  Also to the French (normans). 

 

If we go back in time almost every country has been conquered at one time or an other. 

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3 hours ago, robblok said:

And England given back to the Vikings (their descendants) who conquered large parts of it.  Also to the French (normans). 

 

If we go back in time almost every country has been conquered at one time or an other. 

We were also conquered at various times by the Romans, Angles, Saxons and Jutes but the last successful one were the Normans (not the French).= about 1,056 years ago.

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50 minutes ago, billd766 said:

We were also conquered at various times by the Romans, Angles, Saxons and Jutes but the last successful one were the Normans (not the French).= about 1,056 years ago.

So England was conquered often in the past... up until the point where they had enough new immigrant blood to make a difference ????

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4 hours ago, nausea said:

Then I guess it's mostly posturing on Spain's part, why would they want to import another separatist problem. With such widespread public support for maintaing the British relationship, I guess it ain't gonna happen anytime soon. But my question is what do we gain by this? N.Ireland, Scotland, Wales, I can understand; like you want to maintain influence on your immediate borders (cf. Russia and the Crimea, the US and Cuba, or China and Tibet, just to give a few examples that spring to mind), but some island in the mediterranean that lost it's strategic importance to the, now, non-existent British Empire some time ago?

For what it's worth, Gibraltar is not an island. It's a peninsula.

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On 12/31/2020 at 5:37 PM, nausea said:

Do we need Gibraltar? I can understand the Falklands, like natural resources and all that, but Gibraltar; Napoleon died a long time ago, is the mediterranean really of any significance? 

 

Critical  permanent joint operating base for UK military and  intelligence operations in the region. This is a monitoring station for the migrant traffic in Mediterranean from North Africa. They go to France and then to UK.  Also it is a major fueling depot for shipping. Spain has been trying to get the profitable  business for decades. Gibraltar has no tax on its fueling business and if Spain could take control it would impose tax and gain from that.

 

On 12/31/2020 at 8:49 PM, mrfill said:

Its very handy if you want to blockade the Med for whatever reason.

And a lot of rich people definitely need places like Gibraltar (and the Channel Islands, Isle of Man, British Virgin Is, Cayman Is and Bermuda) as lovely tax havens.

 

The tax haven is not "full". The tax benefits only apply to  income made in Gibraltar. A UK company can not hide its wealth in Gibraltar because of the tie in to  UK revenue. 

 

 

5 hours ago, robblok said:

And England given back to the Vikings (their descendants) who conquered large parts of it.  Also to the French (normans). 

If we go back in time almost every country has been conquered at one time or an other. 

 

The Vikings were then defeated by Saxons in 878 laying the foundation  for England. In 900 the king of the Picts further  destroyed the Vikings.  Then Frenchmen arrived in the Norman conquest and more war, but also the start of the end of slavery. Eventually Normans were sent away and  English went about killing and absorbing everyone into the nation we see today. I think different from Gibraltar because Spanish never really had it. Remember that Spain was a military dictatorship without democracy until only recent times.  If UK was not there, I think Spain would have delayed  becoming free. Only UK has history of stable democracy. Spain does not.

 

 

Also Spain  complaints are funny. It has the occupying colonies in North Africa , Melilia and Ceuta.

 

 

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