Sunday, July 31, 2016

Foreign Affairs Minister Charlie Flanagan has warned Britain that any attempt to fortify the border to prevent migrants slipping into the UK by the back door “won’t work”.

Minister Flanagan (pictured) insisted the two countries must keep the “invisible” border that exists at present after Brexit.

“It is absolutely essential that every effort be made to ensure the existence of what is an invisible border.

“So, any suggestion that there will be a heavily fortified EU frontier, or a heavily fortified border, be it for customs and trade on the one hand, or for security and immigration on the other, is simply inoperable. It won’t work,” Mr Flanagan told the BBC.

He also expressed concern at reports of UK International Trade Secretary Liam Fox pressurising British Prime Minister Theresa May to pull a post-Brexit Britain out of the EU customs union so the country can cut better global deals.

“I have to say I was very surprised at the comments attributed to Dr Liam Fox, and it would be a matter of concern to Ireland were the UK to withdraw entirely from the customs agreement.

“I believe it would result in a situation where there would be a lot of paperwork, and consequent red tape. We need to minimise incumbents and bureaucracy,” he said.

Former Northern Ireland secretary Theresa Villiers, who was a prominent Leave campaigner, also said the border should remain open, despite the risk of illegal immigration.

“The reality is that would mean there would be, perhaps, some risk that non-Irish EU citizens might enter the UK over that land border.

“But the way you tackle people who come and work in the UK without the appropriate permissions is through measures such as cracking down on employing illegal workers.

“The border between the UK and Ireland has never been policed in a significantly hard way…Even during the height of the Troubles, it was very much a free-flowing border. The common travel area survived the Troubles.

“So, I think the idea of imposing, suddenly, a whole host of new border checks, frankly isn’t practical and it’s certainly not desirable.”

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