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Bradley Associates: Bradley Associates on EU warns Spain against impos...
Bradley Associates: Bradley Associates on EU warns Spain against impos...: http://www.idahostatesman.com/2013/08/18/2712587/spanish-fishing-flotilla-protests.html GIBRALTAR — The European Commission said Mond...
Bradley Associates on EU warns Spain against imposing Gibraltar tax
GIBRALTAR
— The European Commission said Monday it hopes Britain and Spain will be able
to resolve their latest dispute over Gibraltar by themselves, but warned that
Spanish threats to impose a border tax would be illegal.
European
Commission spokesman Olivier Bailly said the entry tax suggested by Spanish
Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia Margallo was not official but that
"any tax or fees imposed at the border of a member state will be illegal
under EU law. Illegal. Not in line with EU law."
Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso discussed the spat with Spanish Prime Minister
Mariano Rajoy by telephone Monday and agreed that a commission fact finding
mission should go to the Gibraltar
border area as soon as possible and examine the border control and movement
of people and goods questions, the commission said in a statement.
Barroso
expressed hope that Spain and Britain would address the issues in line with
their EU membership.
Last
week, Barroso talked with British Prime Minister David Cameron.
The
row stems from Gibraltar's construction of an artificial
reef, which Spain says affects its fishermen. In apparent retaliation,
Spanish police enforced border control checks on cars entering Gibraltar,
creating massive tailbacks. The dispute has led to a sudden souring in
diplomatic relations. Spain says it will take all legal measures to defend its
interests, while Britain pledges to stand by Gibraltar.
On
Monday, a British Royal Navy warship arrived in Gibraltar for what Britain's
government said was a planned naval exercise in the Mediterranean.
Spain
ceded sovereignty of Gibraltar to Britain in the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, but
has persistently sought its return.
The
fishermen claim the reef of around 70 concrete blocks — some with steel rods
protruding — could snare and damage their nets and have stopped fishing there.
Rajoy
has defended the border controls, saying they are needed to combat drug and
tobacco smuggling, adding that the checks are in line with security policies
employed by member countries of the Schengen free travel zone. Britain and
Gibraltar are not part of the Schengen agreement.
Besides
floating the idea of charging people entering and leaving Gibraltar 50 euros
($66) to provide compensation for the losses that the fishermen face, Margallo
has also talked of investigating Gibraltarians living in Spain for possible
financial fraud.
Gibraltar's
chief minister, Fabian Picardo, said the reef protects fish stocks from being
over-exploited. He said Sunday that that "hell will freeze over"
before Gibraltar removes the reef, and he has accused Spain of behaving like
North Korea.
Gibraltar
has accused Rajoy of using the reef dispute to deflect domestic attention away
from Spain's severe economic crisis and allegations of corruption involving his
ruling Popular Party.
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