British citizens will be able to travel for 90 days without visas

Millions of Britons will have been able to travel across the Mediterranean for their summer holidays without the need for visas. That's if you don't get a deal on Brexit. Eurodeputs in Brussels today allowed anyone traveling within EU borders, and staying less than 90 days, there will be no need for [...]
Eurodeputs in Brussels today allowed anyone traveling within EU borders, and staying less than 90 days, there will be no need for the costly travel document. This is normally true of British citizens, unless an agreement is voted on Brex by the British Parliament, writes the Daily Mail.
This means travel to popular countries such as Spain, Greece, Portugal, Italy, Malta, and France, which are much visited by a large number of tourists from Great Britain.
Implementation would depend on the possibility that the citizens of the European Union can travel with the same conditions in Britain. Official London has said the possibilities are good for adopting such a law in principle.
Meanwhile, an EU Commissioner warned that luggage checks would enter into force immediately on all EU external borders for British citizens, if Britain were to come out without reaching an agreement by the bloc.
The visa law was passed by the European Parliament by a margin of 502-81 in the vote, but is likely to cause outrage in Britain.
EU member states with the promotion of Spain referred to a footnote in law that Gibraltar is a British crown colony.
The United Nations legally lists Gibraltar as a non-government territory, but Britain insists it is part of the United Kingdom family and that its citizens have voted freely to remain British.
The reference has upset the United Kingdom and upheld the law, which was already adopted by the European Commission.
Gibraltar residents, whose economy depends on an open border with Spain, voted overwhelmingly to stay in the EU in Britain's 2016 referendum.
Spain, which holds national elections on 28 April, sees Brexit as a chance to gather the rest of the EU to take as part of its territory of 33,000 inhabitants.
It has already secured a veto right if future Brex agreements can be implemented in Gibraltar after Britain has left the EU. /Express/












