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Germany warns 'no going back' if Britain curbs EU immigration - report

German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a cabinet meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin October 29, 2014. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke

BERLIN (Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel has warned Britain's David Cameron that putting limits on immigration from other European Union nations would be a "point of no return" that could sharply increase the risk of Britain leaving the EU, a magazine said.

The weekly Der Spiegel, citing unnamed sources in Merkel's office and the German foreign ministry, reported on Sunday that Merkel was becoming worried for the first time that a British exit from the EU - dubbed "Brexit" - was a real possibility.

Under growing pressure from the anti-EU UK Independence Party (UKIP) ahead of a May 2015 national election, Cameron's Conservatives have said they would try to cap immigration from the rest of the EU if re-elected.

Both Merkel and the European Commission in Brussels have said this would violate a fundamental EU principle that allows citizens of the bloc to live and work in any member state.

Spiegel cited sources in Berlin saying that if Cameron does insist on limiting the number of immigrants from other EU states, "there will be no going back".

"Should Cameron persist (in this plan), Chancellor Angela Merkel would abandon her efforts to keep Britain in the EU. With that a point of no return would be reached," it quoted the sources as saying, adding: "That would be it then."

There was no suggestion that Germany, the EU's biggest economy and most powerful member, would itself push Britain towards the exit. Merkel has said she strongly backs continued British membership of the 28-nation bloc but not at any price.

TRYING TO PERSUADE CAMERON

No member state has ever left the EU, though the bloc's Lisbon treaty does contain a legal mechanism for a country to do so if it chooses. Other member states cannot force it out.

Merkel tried to convince the British premier at the last EU summit not to put limits on the number of EU citizens allowed to work in Britain, Spiegel said, but subsequent comments by British officials suggested her warning had fallen on deaf ears.

Cameron has said he will hold an in-or-out referendum on EU membership in 2017 if he wins the May election. He has said he wants Britain to remain inside a reformed EU but it is far from clear the reforms he wants will be accepted by other members.

Britain's Sunday Times newspaper reported last month that Merkel was open to talks with Cameron on possible restrictions for migrant EU workers bending the rules to claim welfare benefits inappropriately in other countries in the bloc - a key concern for many British voters.

"On the other hand, we must not interfere with the fundamental principles of free movement in Europe," it quoted Merkel as saying.

Large numbers of people from eastern Europe, especially Poland, have moved to the UK since their countries joined the EU from 2004.

Supporters of EU enlargement in Britain and elsewhere say they have given a big boost to the economy. Critics say they have put great strain on local services such as health, housing and education.

(Reporting by Stephen Brown; Editing by Gareth Jones)