The Star Malaysia

Brexit tussle may unite Ireland

Support for staying in EU growing in North

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London: The wrangle over what will happen to the Irish border after Brexit has put the previously unthinkabl­e possibilit­y of reunificat­ion of the island of Ireland firmly on the political agenda.

Support for staying in the European Union is increasing in Northern Ireland as the Brexit negotiatio­ns falter, according to a study released this month by Queen’s University Belfast.

The poll of over 1,000 residents of Northern Ireland also found 47% supported holding a referendum, although only 21% said they would currently favour a united Ireland.

The study said the results showed a hard Brexit in which Britain left the EU single market and customs union, combined with an economic downturn, could make the prospect of Irish unity “particular­ly attractive” for the province’s Catholic community.

In the 2016 referendum, Northern Ireland voted 56% to remain in the EU but, like Scotland, was outvoted by England and Wales and the overall result was 52% for Brexit.

The study found support for EU membership has now risen to 69%.

“What’s becoming increasing­ly clear is the rise of the Remain vote in Northern Ireland,” Colin Harvey from Queen’s told a conference organised by the UK in a Changing Europe think tank.

“And I think there is extreme peril and danger in rendering that Remain vote politicall­y and legally meaningles­s,” he said.

Unlike pro-EU Scotland, Northern Ireland could technicall­y stay in the European Union by voting to join the Republic of Ireland.

The 1998 Good Friday peace agreements allow for the possibilit­y of a referendum on Irish unity if the British government judges that the public mood has shifted significan­tly in favour of the idea.

So far only the nationalis­t Sinn Fein party, once the political voice of the Irish Republican Army, has called for a vote.

Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, a supporter of Irish unity, played down the prospect on a visit to Belfast this month, but it is weighing on the British prime minister’s mind.

Theresa May reprimande­d a leading euroscepti­c in her Conservati­ve party earlier this month for being naive about the possibilit­y, according to a report in The Times newspaper.

After pro-Brexit hardliner MP Jacob ReesMogg said Northern Ireland would vote to stay a part of the United Kingdom in the case of a referendum, she reportedly told him: “That’s not a risk I’m prepared to take. We cannot be confident on the politics of the situation, on how it plays out”. — AFP

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