"I can confirm that... There is a task force which will handle all negotiations," Preben Aamann, a spokesman for current EU president Donald Tusk, told AFP, confirming Seeuws had been appointed to lead it.
Aamann said Seeuws was currently doing preparatory work, with the negotiations yet to get underway pending a British decision to formally inform the council that it wanted to leave the European Union.
Tusk and his EU peers said yesterday the talks, however difficult they might be, should begin as soon as possible to end the uncertainty caused by Britain's vote on Thursday to quit the 28-nation bloc.
European Parliament President Martin Schulz said today that Cameron's decision to wait until October to leave was "scandalous" and tantamount to "taking the whole (European) continent hostage".