What if? Scotland considers steps to independence

Dario THUBURN
With polls ahead of Scotland’s independence referendum now showing the two sides neck and neck, Britain is starting to seriously consider the implications of a “Yes” victory.
A pro-independence vote would be a worldwide sensation but would change little immediately, except pehaps boost calls for the resignation of British Prime Minister David Cameron.
It would however sound the starting gun for complex talks between the British and Scottish governments on separating two deeply interlinked economies and political systems after three centuries of shared history, leading up to full independence.
The Scottish National Party (SNP) has already set the date of March 24, 2016 - the 309th anniversary of the Acts of Union between England and Scotland - for a formal division that would cut the United Kingdom’s landmass by a third.
Scotland would be the first independent state created in Europe since the bloody disintegration of Yugoslavia and experts say the separation is most comparable to the peacefully negotiated one of Singapore from Malaysia in 1965.
Much of what happens between a “Yes” vote and 2016 is uncertain, as is the question of whether Scotland could continue to be a member of the European Union as an independent entity or would have to start again and re-apply.
The Scottish government has said the first step taken “soon after a vote for independence” would be to seek a formal transfer of powers to the Scottish parliament to establish “the constitutional platform for an independent Scotland”.
It said it would also start pre-independence talks with the EU “to settle the terms of an independent Scotland’s continuing membership” - even though European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso has warned this would be “extremely difficult”.
The date of Britain’s general election - currently planned for May 2015 - could be put back if there is an independence vote as lawmakers from Scotland could only sit in parliament for the relatively short time before full independence.
The consensus among analysts is that the election would not be delayed but that newly-elected Scottish MPs would not be allowed to vote on any laws concerning England and Wales.
Here are the main practical steps that could lead up to the break away of Scotland:
- Oil and gas: Scotland’s treasure - the North Sea offshore fields - would likely be divided up geographically and the government in Edinburgh would want to move quickly to assert control.
Eighty-five percent of known reserves in the area are in what would be Scottish territory and the sector would make up around 15 percent of the new Scotland’s economy.
- Sharing debt, currency?: A key economic question will be how to share out Britain’s £1.4 billion (1.8 billion euros, $2.3 billion) debt. The Scottish government has said this could be divided on the basis of population share or of Scotland’s historic contribution to Britain’s public finances. Scotland would continue using the pound in the coming months but what happens after full independence is in doubt as the British government has excluded sharing the currency.
The most likely option currently seems to be that Scotland would use the pound without a formal agreement with Britain - like Panama using the US dollar or Kosovo using the euro.
- A constitution: The Scottish government has also said it wants a convention bringing together businesses, civil society and trade unions to come up with a written constitution along European lines - something that Britain lacks. It has said this should include a constitutional ban on nuclear weapons being based in Scotland and wants take steps to order out the Trident nuclear submarines currently based at the Faslane naval base near Glasgow by 2020. - Border: The pro-independence camp have said the existing border would remain only on paper under but the issue is a complex one as Scotland’s plan to ease immigration rules might prompt the rest of Britain to set up barriers and checks.
The SNP also says that no passports would be required for visitors from the rest of the UK to Scotland and vice versa - much like the current arrangement with Ireland - although that will depend on whether Scotland is in the European Union. - Keep the queen: The Scottish National Party (SNP) has said it wants the new Scotland to be a constitutional monarchy with Queen Elizabeth II as its sovereign - much like Australia or Canada - and has said it would join the Commonwealth. The queen herself is staying neutral in the debate and can rest assured there would be no change in the status of her beloved summer residence of Balmoral in northeast Scotland, which is a private estate owned by the royal family. –AFP

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