Iceland moves to withdraw EU application

Iceland's government is seeking to withdraw an application to join the European Union as opinion polls suggest most Icelanders oppose joining the bloc.

Iceland's government will seek parliamentary approval to withdraw its application to join the European Union, opting not to restart accession talks that were put on ice a year ago.

A bill proposing the withdrawal was sent to parliament late on Friday and was due to be debated next week, a foreign ministry spokesperson said on Saturday.

The move came after the parliamentary caucuses of the ruling parties - the centrist Progressive Party and the conservative Independence Party - voted on Friday to withdraw the application.

In comments on the proposal quoted by online news site Visir.is, the government said it "did not have a support base" to complete the accession process.

Opinion polls have consistently shown a majority of Icelanders oppose joining the EU.

Iceland was instead to focus on its ties with the EU as member of the European Economic Area (EEA) - the free trade zone comprising non-EU countries Liechtenstein and Norway as well as the 28-strong EU bloc.

Iceland opened membership talks in 2009 under a coalition that took office after the financial crisis in which Iceland's main banks collapsed.

The accession talks were put on ice ahead of general elections in April which resulted in a change of government, opposed to EU membership.


2 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP



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