Europe
2019.09.19 16:58 GMT+8

UK 'has 11 days to submit a Brexit plan'

Updated 2019.09.19 23:22 GMT+8
Alex Hunt

Antti Rinne, left, with France's President Emmanuel Macron (Credit: AP)

The UK must submit a written proposal for a Brexit deal by September 30 or "it's over", Finland's Prime Minister Antti Rinne has said.

Rinne, whose country currently holds the EU's rotating presidency, spoke after a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron.

According to Helsingin Sanomat, he told Finnish journalists that if the UK wanted to discuss alternatives to the previous Brexit agreement "these must be presented before the end of the month."

"If not then, it's over," he said.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said that the UK is going to leave the EU on October 31, with or without a deal.

He has said that he would rather "die in a ditch" than agree to a fresh delay to Brexit.

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Johnson says he is still hopeful of striking a Brexit deal with the EU which can get the support of MPs - his predecessor Theresa May's agreement with the EU failed to win a majority in the House of Commons.

But Rinne's comments have raised the stakes although the deadline is not yet an official one from the EU side. Rinne is set to discuss it with European Council President Donald Tusk and Johnson in the days ahead.

September 30 comes in the middle of the annual gathering of Johnson's Conservative Party. It has been widely suggested that Johnson planned to wait until after the conference before unveiling any modified Brexit deal proposals, with the mid-October EU summit seen as the crunch time for any outline of a deal to be agreed.

Johnson met the EU's Jean-Claude Juncker on Monday (Credit: AP)

The European Commission said on Thursday that it had received papers from the UK, although they were not the formal written legal proposals Brussels has asked for. 

EC spokeswoman Mina Andreev said they would form the basis of technical discussions, with the UK and EU chief Brexit negotiators due to meet on Friday.

Meanwhile a UK government spokesman rejected the end of September deadline: "We will table formal written solutions when we are ready, not according to an artificial deadline, and when the EU is clear that it will engage constructively on them as a replacement for the 'backstop'."

The UK is leaving the European Union after a referendum in 2016 saw people vote by 51.9 percent to 48.1% to leave.

However the terms of the UK's departure and its future relations with the EU has yet to be agreed, with what happens on the Northern Ireland/Republic of Ireland border the main sticking point.

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