Brexit: All you need to know about Britain's departure from the EU (IV)

Great Britain and the European Union have launched official evacuation talks, here you can find an easy road map to understand the Brex issue starting with the most basic elements then looking at negotiations, followed by a selection of answers to the questions we sent about [...]
What were the reasons for those who were in favour of Britain staying in the EU?
Campaigners of the stance campaign said it made it easier to sell things in other EU countries and, according to them, the flow of migrants, most of whom are young and hungry for work, stimulates economic growth and helps pay public services.
Also, Britain's status in the world would be damaged by evacuation and that the British are safer as part of the 28-nation club, rather than moving on alone.
Will the EU continue to use English?
According to BBC Journal Katia Adler, it will continue. There are 27 EU member states in the bloc, as well as others who claim to join in the future, and the common language continues to be English language ♫ <x0-disappointing for France”, she says.
What about business?
The big businesses with few exceptions were more in favour of Britain staying in the EU because it makes it easier for them to move money, people and products worldwide.
Given London's central role as a financial centre, there is interest in how many jobs they can lose by spreading to other EU countries. Four of the biggest banks in the United States have shown commitment to helping London maintain its position. “BBC” finds that HSBC (Multital British Financial Service Hong Kong) will run as many as 1,000 jobs in Paris.
Some British exporters say they have increased orders and demands due to the decline in the pounds. Others are less optimistic and fear that products destined for the European market should probably be produced in the EU.
Will Brex hurt the product's safety?
The answer is maybe not. It would be up to whether Britain decides to remove the current security standards. Even if that happens, any company that is supposed to export to the EU must comply with its security regulations, and it is hard to imagine a company that would like to produce two types of the same product.
If a British citizen goes to Spain or any other country that is a member of the EU, will health insurance continue to cover expenses?
David, from East Sussex, is concerned about what will happen to his retirement plans. This is an issue that cannot be stated exactly what will happen. At the moment, the British immigrant community in Spain has free access to Spanish hospitals, and their treatments are paid by the National Health Service (NHS). After crossing into permanent residents, Spain pays for their hospital treatment.
In other EU countries like France, repatriated persons who are employed are expected to pay the same health costs as locals, but once they reach retirement age, their medical bills are paid by the NHS.
If Britain stays at the Common Market, or in the European Economic Zone, it may be able to continue with its agreements, according to the British Parliament House of Representatives. If Britain has to negotiate trade agreements with individual member states, it may choose to continue to pay for the health insurance of the repatriated through the NHS or decide to leave it up to them to pay their own expenses if they decide to live abroad, or whether the state they live in does not do so for them.
How much money will Britain save through changes in the benefits of migrants and social aid payments?
A British citizen (Martin, from a city in England, Perandrimore) wanted to know what taxpayers can receive in return from the course of benefits discussed by David Cameron in Brussels. This is not precisely known. According to the tax collection office, around 20,000 EU citizens receive payment for 34,000 children in their country of origin at a cost of 30 million pounds.
What is the “Redshire” that EU opponents are showing disappointment with?
Ged, from Liverpool, believes it is an euphemism for workers' rights and environmental protection. According to economic and political experts, four of the five most costly rules of EU rules are related to employment or to the environment. The EU strategy for efficient energy, which experts say costs 4.7 billion pounds a year, is at the top of the list. Worktime guide (4.2 billion pounds a year) ʹ restricting the weekly working hours to 48 hours ʹ and temporary workers (.1 billion a year) guide, giving temporary staff a lot of the same rights as those who are also on the list.
Will Britain be part of the Transatlantic Partnership for Trade and Investment?
Transatlantic Partnership for Trade and Investment (TTIP) currently under negotiations between the EU and the US would create the largest free trade zone the world has ever seen.
TTIPić followers, including former Prime Minister Cameron, believed this would make American imports cheaper and would promote British exports to the US in the amount of up to 10 billion pounds a year.
But many of the left, including Labus leader Jeremy Corby, fear it will shift more power to multinational corporations, undermine public services, break food standards and threaten basic rights.
President Donald Trump is not for this agreement, which implies that it is now considered impossible to happen but, however, when Britain leaves the EU, it will not be part of TTIP and must negotiate its trade agreements with the United States.
What impact will being removed from the EU have on Britain's long-term policies in Europe?
There are two views on what will happen to the impact by being outside the EU. According to the first one, Britain projects power and influence in the world, working through organisations such as the EU and that itself will be a small force. According to the second, Britain, being uncounted by 27 other members, could move forward and begin to adopt a stronger, independent and confident role on the world stage.
My opinion, says Norman Smith, is that there probably won't be much change. According to him, the British state will continue to be a member of important organisations such as Natto and the United Nations, and furthermore continue to co-operate with partners who are part of the EU. For example, there will still be close ties with France in terms of defence.
The UK will still be old Britain, continuing to have powerful armies, will be rich state and nuclear power, so I don't think people will suddenly think Britain is a whole other state.
Is it possible for other countries to leave the EU and whether Britain can start a new free trade zone?
Kevin Connolly, says that a few days ago I was talking to a French conservative politician who said that if there was a vote in France tomorrow, as the right-wing National Front would want, France would vote for EU departure.
But in general there is little prospect of a wave of rebels that would include the continent. When a state like Ireland had a fight with the EU over taxes, it caused frustration for Irish politicians, but most key leaders in Europe have raised the idea that the EU has brought peace and prosperity for decades.
What will happen to the borders in Gibraltar and Northern Ireland?
Even in this question, Kevin Connolly, who thinks the question of what will happen to the boundaries behind Brex is one of the most difficult issues, for their very nature.
Since 1985, when Spain joined the EU, it has been prevented from closing the border with Gibraltar as a way of putting pressure on British territory.
In fact, 12,000 Spanish citizens spend every day in that territory to work, and Spain's area around Gibraltar is a very gloomy part.
On the other hand, the Spanish have spoken openly about this as an opportunity to restore Gibraltar. Jose Manuel Garcia-Margalo, Spanish foreign affairs minister, said Britain's EU exit vote was “a historic opportunity in more than three hundred years to retake Gibraltar”.
The situation with Ireland's border is more complex. For some of the citizens of the United Kingdom who live in Northern Ireland, the total disappearance of military checkpoints on the border is one of the clearest recent reminders of concerns, and no one wants a border like this to return.
But when the day comes that Ireland will be in the EU and Britain will not, the Irish border will also be Britain's land border with the European Union.
Conservative leader Theresa May has said that we don't see a return to the boundaries of the past, but the truth is that if Britain withdraws from the common customs zone, then apparently some of the controls will be necessary at that border.
And if Britain wants to stop Polish and Roma immigrants from using Dublin Airport as a back door in Great Britain, then something has to be done about it./Periscopi/
Alex Hunt and Brian Wheeler, who translated it and adapted Periscope.












