Britain and the European Union formally signed a treaty on the status of Gibraltar on Tuesday, following an agreement struck last year aimed at easing border crossings and ending ​years of political uncertainty over the British overseas territory.

The treaty was signed in ​Brussels by European Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic, British Minister of State for ⁠Europe Stephen Doughty, Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares and Gibraltar’s Chief Minister Fabian Picardo.

Gibraltar ​residents can cross over to Spain using residence cards without needing to have their passports ​stamped, while Spanish citizens can cross using a government ID card. The deal is designed to facilitate the movement of people and goods and avoid lengthy delays for the roughly 15,000 workers who cross the ​border each day.

Albares said the deal opened a new chapter for Gibraltar, Spain, Britain ​and the European Union. He said it would benefit the 300,000 residents of the Campo de Gibraltar ‌region ⁠by improving connectivity, encouraging investment and strengthening cross-border cooperation, while replacing centuries of mistrust with a shared future built on coexistence and prosperity.

Britain won Gibraltar — a strategically important enclave at the southern tip of Spain — in the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, which ended the War ​of Spanish Succession.

Those arriving ​at Gibraltar airport ⁠will show their passports to both Gibraltar and Spanish border officers, and Britain wants a system similar to French police operating at ​London’s St Pancras railway station for the Eurostar service.

Residents welcomed the ​dismantling of border ⁠controls.

“It is good for Spaniards and good for us. It’s fantastic,” Gibraltar resident Elisabeth Tanino told Reuters.

Gibraltarian Lidia Mifsud added that Gibraltar and the nearby Spanish town of La Linea ⁠had ​long enjoyed close ties and that the removal of ​border checks would make daily life easier for workers and residents on both sides.

Via Reuters