Brexit talks begin in Brussels

The first of Brexit talks have begun in Brussels, with civil servants working to find common ground between the British and European Union negotiators.

David Davis and Michel Barnier

Brexit Minister David Davis meets with European Union Chief Negotiator Michel Barnier. (AAP)

Dozens of British officials and their EU counterparts have got the first full round of Brexit negotiations under way, bringing a quiet buzz to the European Commission's Brussels headquarters.

After a brief handshake and sit-down for the cameras between Brexit Secretary David Davis and chief EU negotiator Michel Barnier on Monday, the pair left the real work of the week to teams of civil servants divided into groups by topic.

Davis returned to London but will be back on Thursday, officials said, in the hope that he and Barnier can give their political endorsement to a first set of partial agreements.

Barnier's team is known as the Article 50 Task Force after the provision of the EU treaty under which Britain has opted to quit the European Union. Numbering about 40, most are involved in the talks in the EU executive's Berlaymont headquarters.

Barnier, a former French cabinet minister who much prefers to speak his native tongue, greeted Davis in English, the only language most British civil servants can work in. Though Barnier insisted French be one of the two languages for negotiations, English is the lingua franca of Brussels and will predominate.

The meeting between Davis and Barnier featured just two aides each; the absence of notes in front of the British trio, compared to sheaves of papers on the EU side, sparked scathing jibes from critics in Britain who see Prime Minister Theresa's May's government as badly unprepared.

The three priorities are commonly referred to as citizens' rights, financial settlement and borders with Ireland.

London and Brussels agree that some 4.5 million expatriates who live on either side of a new EU-UK border, two-thirds of them in Britain, should not lose rights they have as EU citizens.


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Source: AAP



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