LONDON (Reuters) - European citizens will be treated as immigrants in Britain after they leave the European Union, the prime minister and British Conservative leader Boris Johnson said on Wednesday.

Johnson said in a statement to the party that the post-Brexit immigration policy will equal Europeans and immigrants in terms of treatment and procedures.

He added that the exit of his country from the European Union is a new opportunity to achieve equality for all coming to Britain.

On the other hand, Al Jazeera correspondent Ayachi Jabo said that this system, which will be adopted by Britain if the Conservative Party wins the next elections, mimics the Australian model, which is trying to attract high qualifications from other countries.

However, he stressed that the implementation of this matter will be faced with major problems because of the British economy depends on the simple labor, especially the agricultural sector and health, and this is a long-term historical relationship with the European Union.

First ghett Poland
Polish workers returning home outnumbered their first-time departures in a century due to fears of Brexit, and mass exodus from Britain was the cause of the overall decline.

London made the decision to leave the union in a referendum held on June 23, 2016, after which it began negotiations with Brussels, through its activation of Article 50 of the Lisbon Agreement, which regulates the procedures for leaving the union.

It was originally scheduled to leave Britain on March 29, but was postponed due to the failure to reach a final agreement governing the process after the rejection of parliament.