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Free EU-UK movement to end after Brexit: UK gov't spokesperson

PR dla Zagranicy
Victoria Bieniek 31.07.2017 15:17
The free movement of people between Britain and the European Union will end in March 2019, a British government spokesperson has said.
Photo: skeeze/pixabay.com/Creative Commons CC0Photo: skeeze/pixabay.com/Creative Commons CC0

This announcement comes just days after British immigration minister Brandon Lewis said the free movement of workers would end when Britain left the European Union.

But on Wednesday, British Home Secretary Amber Rudd was quoted by the Financial Times daily as saying: “We must keep attracting the brightest and best migrants from around the world”.

Lewis on Thursday told the BBC that “a new system of immigration” would be in place before Brexit as the UK has a “long term aim” of reducing migration from nearly 250,000 to “sustainable levels” of “tens of thousands” but did not place a time frame on the target.

Some three million EU nationals, among them about 800,000 Poles, live in the UK.

Warsaw has repeatedly requested post-Brexit guarantees for Polish nationals living in Britain.

British Prime Minister Theresa May in June made what she called a “fair offer”, saying that EU citizens who had lived in Britain for five years would be entitled to healthcare, education, welfare and pensions, just like a UK national.

She also promised that no EU citizen in the UK at the time of Britain’s divorce from the bloc, scheduled for April 2019, would be deported immediately.

May said her offer “aimed at giving as much certainty as possible to citizens who have settled in the UK, building careers and lives, and contributing so much to our society”.

Austrian Chancellor Christian Kern said May's offer "is a first good step which we appreciate” but German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that many questions remained. (vb)

Source: IAR

tags: brexit
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