On Ireland’s border, Britain’s EU exit threatens jobs, peace

Vote Leave campaign leader Boris Johnson leaves his home in London, Britain June 29, 2016.   REUTERS/Paul Hackett

 

Ireland / AP

Hugh Maguire can’t believe the British really did it.
The Northern Ireland farmer, like many residents along the United Kingdom’s virtually unmarked land border with the Republic of Ireland, faces the risk of financial ruin if Britain proceeds with plans to exit the European Union. EU farm subsidies provide most of his income from highland pastures of cows and sheep — around 80,000 euros ($90,000) annually to support his 241-hectare (600-acre) farm. He gets the subsidies under the EU’s “Less Favored Areas” rating — farms on marginally productive but environmentally valued land.
Maguire called last week’s referendum verdict — with 52 percent voting UK-wide to leave the bloc, including 44 percent in Northern Ireland — “a disaster.”
“I can’t see Britain subsidizing us the same as the EU has done,” said Maguire, who voted to remain. “We’ve been much better off with the EU when we got the subsidies. … I honestly think in a few years’ time, there’ll be no farming in this part of Northern Ireland.”
All along the meandering 310-mile (500-kilometer) border with the Irish Republic, residents are trying to imagine what life will be like if Northern Ireland, like the rest of the UK, actually leaves the 28-nation EU. Both the U.K. and Ireland entered the then-European Economic Community together in 1973, and their cooperation at the European level helped to eliminate the border as a barrier to the economy or tourism by the early 1990s.
Many now fear that both British and Irish authorities will have no choice but to redeploy customs officers and police to deter immigration and smuggling, a prospect that could fuel renewed support for the outlawed Irish Republican Army. IRA attacks from the 1970s to 1990s spurred Britain to build border networks of bases and watchtowers manned by soldiers, but those installations have disappeared following the 2005 decision of most IRA members to disarm and renounce violence.
“For the sake of promoting peace and economic growth, we need to keep the Irish border as invisible as possible. Voters in England don’t really understand what’s at stake here,” said John Paul Feeley, a county councilman born in Blacklion, a village of 200 bordered to the north and east by Northern Ireland.
Feeley said around 30,000 people travel daily across the border in both directions to attend jobs and schools, and the last thing they need is a return to traffic-snarling checkpoints.
“It’s a very serious situation for us,” he said. The shock decision to back a Brexit sent the British pound tumbling against other currencies, including the euro used in the Republic of Ireland. The change means that southerners with euros in their pockets suddenly find shopping in Northern Ireland around 10 percent cheaper, while Northern Ireland-based companies that do business in pounds find imported goods growing prohibitively expensive.
“A lot of our customers are in Europe, and I think it’s going to make it more difficult for us to compete in Europe,” said Jonathan Balfour, director of Elite Electronic Systems, which employs around 200 people in the nearby Northern Ireland town of Enniskillen.

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