UK's May Says No-Deal Preparations 'Must Continue' Despite Brexit Delay

UK's May Says No-Deal Preparations 'Must Continue' Despite Brexit Delay

UK Prime Minister Theresa May said in a letter to civil servants on Monday that preparations for a no-deal outcome should continue despite a new Brexit deadline extension agreed between London and Brussels, media reported

MOSCOW (Pakistan Point News / Sputnik - 15th April, 2019) UK Prime Minister Theresa May said in a letter to civil servants on Monday that preparations for a no-deal outcome should continue despite a new Brexit deadline extension agreed between London and Brussels, media reported.

The letter comes after the Sky news broadcaster reported on Friday, citing official correspondence, that no-deal contingency plans were being wound down by the government "with immediate effect" in light of the new Brexit delay.

"On preparations specifically for leaving the EU without a deal, you will rightly be guided by the cabinet secretary and by your own permanent secretaries about continued planning. Necessary preparations for a no-deal outcome must continue, though with sensibly adjusted timescales given the extension we have agreed," May said in the letter, as quoted by The Guardian and other UK media.

The prime minister also thanked civil servants for their work on Brexit preparations and expressed hope that they would manage to "take advantage of a well-deserved break over the Easter Holiday."

Meanwhile, the newspaper noted that some 16,000 civil servants had been redeployed or recruited to perform no-deal related work, with the fate of approximately 4,500 new recruits uncertain if the contingency plans were scrapped.

As a result of the European Council special meeting, which took place on April 10, London was given a flexible Brexit extension until October 31, with the country being obliged to hold European elections in May if it does not leave by that time, or withdraw without a deal on June 1.

Originally, the United Kingdom was supposed to have left the bloc on March 29, however the May government failed to secure support for its divorce agreement before the deadline, which prompted London to seek an extension to avoid a no-deal scenario.