Ex-minister says Cameron will secure insignificant changes from EU![]() June 5, 2015 - 14:52 AMT PanARMENIAN.Net - UK Prime Minister David Cameron will not achieve anything of significance in his planned renegotiation of Britain's ties with the European Union, former finance minister Nigel Lawson said, according to Reuters. Cameron, whose Conservatives won a surprise majority at an election last month, has begun talks with other European leaders in his bid to reform Britain's relationship with the bloc ahead of a membership referendum by the end of 2017. "It is likely that the changes David Cameron secures will be inconsequential, of no significance at all. He will present them as a major change," Lawson, finance minister from 1983-89 under Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, told the BBC. "He is looking for more than that but what he will secure will be trivial ... they are not going to give him anything significant," said Lawson, who has previously said Britain should leave the bloc. Cameron has said he would prefer to stay in a reformed EU but will rule nothing out if he cannot get the changes he wants. Lawson said he expected Britain would vote to remain within the bloc but would later lament doing so. "I think they will come to regret staying in because they will discover that there hasn’t been any fundamental change," he said. Azerbaijani authorities report that they have already resettled 3,000 people in the Nagorno-Karabakh town of Stepanakert. On June 10, Azerbaijani President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev will leave for Turkey on a working visit. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev arrived in Moscow on April 22 to hold talks with Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin. Authorities said a total of 192 Azerbaijani troops were killed and 511 were wounded during Azerbaijan’s offensive. Partner news |