lundi, décembre 16, 2024
Home Europe Brussels takes UK to court over EU citizens’ rights

Brussels takes UK to court over EU citizens’ rights


The European Commission has longstanding concerns that the extended families of Europeans living in the UK aren’t getting what they were promised – and time is running out to address legal concerns under the Brexit deal.

ADVERTISEMENT

The European Commission on Monday took the UK to court, for failing to grant EU citizens the full rights it says were promised under the 2019 Brexit deal.  

Some three million EU citizens were living in the UK at the time it left the bloc – and the Commission says London isn’t sticking to its promise that they can continue living there on the same terms.

“There were several shortcomings in the United Kingdom’s implementation of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, which continue to affect EU citizens under the Withdrawal Agreement,” the Commission said in a Monday statement, citing the right for workers to move and reside freely in other counties.

The Commission “decided to refer the United Kingdom to the [EU] Court of Justice”, it added. Luxembourg judges were given jurisdiction over disputes under the terms of a deal signed by then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

In Brexit talks, the EU made the fate of Europeans already living in the UK one of its top three issues — alongside the UK settling its budget bill with Brussels, and safeguarding an open land border with Ireland.

The Commission worries that UK rules don’t reach far enough, and in July said that children in legal guardianship and other extended family members of EU citizens weren’t getting the rights they should have.

The referral to Luxembourg – alongside a parallel case the Commission brought against the UK concerning investment treaties with individual EU members – is now down to the wire.

The withdrawal deal included an 11-month transition period in which EU law continued to apply to the UK – and the Commission then has a four year window in which to refer cases to court, a period that is now due to expire within weeks, on 31 December 2024. 

The EU’s most senior judges will then have to opine on the issue, a process which can in practice take months if not years.

The UK’s new Prime Minister Keir Starmer, himself a former international human rights lawyer, has promised to reset what he describes as a botched Brexit deal, highlighting ongoing issues with touring musicians and the trade in food products. 

A spokesperson for the UK Home Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.  



Source link

Must Read

Hungary and Slovakia veto EU sanctions on Georgian officials as protests continue

The sanctions proposed by Kaja Kallas targeted state officials of Georgia involved in the repression...

L’armée américaine annonce avoir tué douze membres du groupe Etat islamique dans des frappes aériennes en Syrie

Le déroulé des événements jusqu’à la chute de Bachar Al-Assad ...
video

Top 10 Things That Don't Exist Anymore From The 2010s

Remember when these were everywhere? Join us as we take a nostalgic trip down memory lane, revisiting the tech and trends ... source

Women and children killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza shelters

A bearded man in a red-and-white striped top stands up, eyes wide and arms flung out, and howls. Scattered around him lie the devastated...