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Euro crisis: Summit abandons EU-wide treaty change | Euro crisis: Summit abandons EU-wide treaty change |
(40 minutes later) | |
Attempts to get all 27 EU states to agree changes to the bloc's treaties to tackle the eurozone crisis have failed. | |
Speaking after long talks in Brussels, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the 17 eurozone states and others would work on a separate pact instead. | |
France and Germany are pushing for tough new budgetary rules to be enshrined in the accord. | |
But UK Prime Minister David Cameron said an EU-wide deal "isn't in Britain's interests". | |
After nearly 10 hours of talks between EU leaders, Mr Sarkozy said he would have preferred a new treaty involving all 27 member states. | |
But he said Mr Cameron had proposed a protocol to be written in the deal allowing London to opt-out on proposed change on financial services. | |
"We could not accept this," Mr Sarkozy said. | |
Mr Sarkozy added that Hungary also decided to remain outside the proposed treaty, while the Czech Republic and Sweden wanted first to consult with their parliaments. | |
"All the others have wished to join the inter-governmental treaty," the French leader said. | |
He denied suggestions that the new treaty would lead to a two-speed EU. | |
Speaking at a news conference shortly afterwards, Mr Cameron said he had made "a tough decision, but the right one". | |
"What's on offer isn't in Britain's interests," he said, adding that he would not put the proposed deal before British parliament as it was an accord outside EU structures. | |
In Brussels, EU leaders managed to agree on a ceiling for the size of the eurozone's bailout fund, saying it would be capped at 500bn euros (£427bn;$ 666bn). |