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Pungutan Suara Brexit: Keputusan Penuh Undian Diketahui Petang Ini

24-6-2016 12:50 PM| Diterbitkan: CARI-LTS| Dilihat: 4052| Komen: 5

Description: Proses pengiraan bagi menentukan kedudukan Britain dalam Kesatuan Eropah, EU atau Brexit kini sedang berlangsung selepas proses pengundian ditutup 10 malam waktu tempatan.
Oleh : TS LOO


sumber foto: http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/

sumber foto:http://stmedia.stimg.co/


Proses pengiraan bagi menentukan kedudukan Britain dalam Kesatuan Eropah, EU atau Brexit kini sedang berlangsung selepas proses pengundian ditutup 10 malam waktu tempatan.

Kiraan undi berjalan di beberapa pusat pengundian di seluruh United Kingdom.

Keputusan akan diumumkan secara berperingkat dengan keputusan pertama dijangka diketahui sekitar awal pagi Jumaat waktu tempatan.

Ia diumum mengikut kawasan termasuk Scotland, Ireland Utara, Wales, London dan lapan wilayah Inggeris yang lain.


Laporan awal menyaksikan keputusan untuk keluar mendapat sedikit kelebihan dalam undian yang dilihat hampir sama rata.

Antara keputusan awal adalah di Newcastle-upon-Tyne dan Gibraltar yang kedua-duanya cenderung untuk kekal dalam kesatuan itu.- CARI





sumber : www.bbc.com
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Quote pyropura 24-6-2016 01:34 PM
Edited by pyropura at 24-6-2016 01:38 PM

... dah confirm dah, TT boleh ubah tajuk... dan St Pancras Station kena buat booth for VAT refund... @mbhcsf   @FOTHER-MUCKER


Britain Votes to Leave E.U., Stunning the World
LONDON — Britain has voted to leave the European Union, a historic decision sure to reshape the nation’s place in the world, rattle the Continent and rock political establishments throughout the West.
With all but a handful of the country’s cities and towns reporting Friday morning, the Leave campaign held a 52 percent to 48 percent lead. The BBC called the race for the Leave campaign shortly before 4:45 a.m., with 13.1 million votes having been counted in favor of leaving and 12.2 million in favor of remaining.
The value of the British pound plummeted as financial markets absorbed the news.
Despite opinion polls ahead of the referendum on Thursday that showed either side in a position to win, the outcome nonetheless stunned much of Britain, Europe and the trans-Atlantic alliance, highlighting the power of anti-elite, populist and nationalist sentiment at a time of economic and cultural dislocation.
“Dare to dream that the dawn is breaking on an independent United Kingdom,” Nigel Farage, the leader of the U.K. Independence Party, one of the primary forces behind the push for a referendum on leaving the European Union, told cheering supporters just after 4 a.m.
Britain will become the first country to leave the 28-member bloc, which has been increasingly weighed down by its failures to deal fully with a succession of crises, from the financial collapse of 2008 to a resurgent Russia and the massive influx of migrants last year.
The result left Prime Minister David Cameron, who led the charge for Britain to remain a member of the European Union, badly weakened and at risk of losing his job. It was a remarkable victory for the country’s anti-European forces, which not long ago were considered to have little chance of prevailing.
Financial markets, which had been anticipating that Britain would vote to stay in, braced for a day of losses and possible turmoil. Economists had predicted that a vote to leave the bloc could do substantial damage to the British economy.

Mr. Cameron had vowed before the vote to move quickly to begin the divorce process if Britain voted to leave. But even if he follows through — some leaders of the Leave movement have counseled moving slowly — nothing will change immediately on either side of the Channel, with existing trade and immigration rules remaining in place. The withdrawal process is expected to be complex and contentious, though under the bloc’s governing treaty it is effectively limited to two years.
        
            
For the European Union, the result is a disaster, raising questions about the direction, cohesion and future of a bloc built on liberal values and shared sovereignty that represents, with NATO, a vital component of Europe’s postwar structure.
Britain is the second-largest economy after Germany in the European Union, a nuclear power with a seat on the United Nations Security Council, an advocate of free-market economics and a close ally of the United States.
The loss of Britain is an enormous blow to the credibility of a bloc already under pressure from slow growth, high unemployment, the migrant crisis, Greece’s debt woes and the conflict in Ukraine.
“The main impact will be massive disorder in the E.U. system for the next two years,” said Thierry de Montbrial, founder and executive chairman of the French Institute of International Relations. “There will be huge political transition costs, on how to solve the British exit, and the risk of a domino effect or bank run from other countries that think of leaving.”
Europe will have to “reorganize itself in a system of different degrees of association,” said Karl Kaiser, a Harvard professor and former director of the German Council on Foreign Relations. “Europe does have an interest in keeping Britain in the single market, if possible, and in an ad hoc security relationship.”
While leaders of the Leave campaign spoke earnestly about sovereignty and the supremacy of Parliament or in honeyed tones about “the bright sunlit uplands” of Britain’s future free of Brussels, it was anxiety about immigration — membership in the European Union means freedom of movement and labor throughout the bloc — that defined and probably swung the campaign.
With net migration to Britain of 330,000 people in 2015, more than half of them from the European Union, Mr. Cameron had no effective response to how he could limit the influx. And there was no question that while the immigrants contributed more to the economy and to tax receipts than they cost, parts of Britain felt that its national identity was under assault and that the influx was putting substantial pressure on schools, health care and housing.
The campaign run by one of the loudest proponents of leaving, the U.K. Independence Party, or UKIP, flirted with xenophobia, nativism and what some of its critics considered racism. But the official, more mainstream Leave campaign also invoked immigration as an issue and its slogan, “Take control,” resonated with voters who feel that the government is failing to regulate the inflow of people from Europe and beyond.
Other anti-establishment and far-right parties in Europe, like the National Front of Marine Le Pen in France, Geert Wilder’s party in the Netherlands and the Alternative for Germany party will celebrate the outcome. The depth of anti-Europe sentiment could be a key factor in national elections scheduled next year in the other two most important countries of the European Union, France and Germany.
The British campaign featured assertions and allegations tossed around with little regard to the facts. Both sides played to emotion, and the most common emotion played upon was fear.
The Remain side, citing scores of experts and elite opinion, warned that Brexit would mean an economic catastrophe, a plunging pound, higher taxes, more austerity and the loss of jobs.
The Leave side warned that remaining would produce uncontrolled immigration, crime and terrorism, with hordes pouring into Britain from Turkey, a country of 77 million Muslims that borders Syria and Iraq and hopes to join the European Union.

Just a week before the vote, the country was jolted by the brutal murder of a young Labour member of Parliament, Jo Cox, 41, a strong supporter of Remain. A man who prosecutors said shouted “Britain first,” “This is for Britain,” and “Keep Britain independent” was charged with her murder.
In England especially, 85 percent of the population of Britain, many people fell back on national pride, cultural exceptionalism and nostalgia. Many English voters chose to believe the insistence of anti-European leaders like Boris Johnson, the former mayor of London and potential challenger to Mr. Cameron, that as a great nation, Britain would be more powerful and successful outside the European Union than inside.
In Scotland and Northern Ireland, by contrast, there was a strong pro-European feeling that has only increased tensions within the United Kingdom itself.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/2 ... eferendum.html?_r=0

Quote kentel 24-6-2016 02:36 PM
pyropura replied at 24-6-2016 01:34 PM
... dah confirm dah, TT boleh ubah tajuk... dan St Pancras Station kena buat booth for VAT refund[/b ...

watawan CI kan lagi lembap dr porumer
Quote safran 24-6-2016 04:14 PM
pyropura replied at 24-6-2016 01:34 PM
... dah confirm dah, TT boleh ubah tajuk... dan St Pancras Station kena buat booth for VAT refund[/b ...

Cameron dah resign...
Quote kemaruk 24-6-2016 04:19 PM
seronok la geng2 forex

gbp/jpy sell sell sell!!!!
Quote pyropura 24-6-2016 04:41 PM

..wow...

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