[Euractiv]
Le premier ministre britannique, David Cameron, a déclaré aujourd'hui (28 octobre) qu'il travaillerait avec les autres pays de l'UE en dehors de la zone euro pour s'assurer que leurs intérêts ne sont pas compromis au bénéfice de la résolution de la crise de la dette souveraine dans les pays bénéficiant de la monnaie unique.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said today (28 October) he would work with other EU countries outside the eurozone to ensure their interests are not compromised in efforts to fix the region's sovereign debt crisis.
Cameron reminded the European Commission it had a duty to safeguard the 27-member EU bloc, amid concerns of 'caucusing' - decision-making by some members of a group -- by the 17 eurozone states that share the embattled currency. The prime minister, in Australia for a Commonwealth summit, said London's status as Europe's financial centre was one of the main risks of being frozen out of talks on EU reforms, describing the city as under "constant attack through Brussels directives".
Britain is also wary of possible changes to EU single-market trade terms. “There are a lot of things the eurozone is doing together. Having more meetings alone, establishing machinery - it raises the question of could there be caucusing?" said Cameron, who had attended Wednesday's emergency EU summit in Brussels.
Lire : euractiv.com
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