Britain rejects recreating border with Ireland after leaving the EU
Britain has said there should be no border posts between Ireland and the British province of Northern Ireland after Brexit, in a paper that attempts to resolve one of the most complex aspects of its exit from the European Union.
Some 30,000 people cross the 500-kilometer border every day without customs or immigration checks.
Negotiators must work out how to tighten controls without inflaming tensions in a region that suffered decades of bloody turmoil before a peace deal in 1998.
As part of a series of papers that Prime Minister Theresa May hopes will push forward talks with the EU, the government on Tuesday outlined its vision for a “frictionless” frontier without “physical border infrastructure and border posts.”
May also said Britain would consider stepping in to replace some EU funding for peace projects in Northern Ireland after it leaves the bloc in March 2019 and beyond, to prevent a resurgence of violence between pro-British Protestants and Catholic Irish nationalists.
“Both sides need to show flexibility and imagination,” said a British government source, who didn’t want to be identified.
“We have some very clear principles. Top of our list is to agree, upfront, no physical border infrastructure — that would mean a return to the border posts of the past and is completely unacceptable to the United Kingdom.”
Commenting on an advance briefing of the position paper, the Irish government said it was “timely and helpful” and that it hoped enough progress could be made to move talks forward.
“Protecting the peace process is crucial and it must not become a bargaining chip in the negotiations,” it said.
But Mark Daly, deputy leader of Ireland’s opposition Fianna Fail party, said the proposals for a frictionless border appeared “more like fiction, and clueless on this island.”
It will be “a smugglers’ charter,” he told BBC Radio Four.
Northern Ireland sold US$$3.5 billion of goods into Ireland in 2015, according to official figures, and many businesses have complex supply chains that involve crossing the border multiple times during the production process.
Britain said it wanted to maintain a Common Travel Area, a pact that allows free movement between the United Kingdom and Ireland for British and Irish citizens, and introduce new “trusted trader” arrangements to help larger companies.
Smaller firms would be exempt from customs processes.
It rejected the idea of an effective customs border in the Irish Sea that separates England, Wales and Scotland from Ireland and Northern Ireland as “not constitutionally or economically viable.”
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