Gulf News

Ireland plans for ‘soft border’ with UK

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Ireland is planning a system of electronic border surveillan­ce that it hopes will prevent it having to erect physical barriers with Northern Ireland when Britain leaves the European Union, its customs service said yesterday.

The unexpected result of the June 23 referendum in which UK citizens voted to leave the EU created a delicate problem for Ireland, which will remain in the free-trade, free-movement bloc and has the only land border with the United Kingdom.

The government­s of Britain and Ireland, countries with a close but troubled history, have both said they do not want to put border posts back on roads into Northern Ireland, a partly self-governing UK province.

While Britain is keen to secure some kind of freetrade deal with the EU, exactly how that would work, and what would be the new rules for people moving in and out of the country, Ireland is preparing for at least some changes.

“Even if there is a freetrade agreement, we will still need to know what is being traded, what is crossing the border,” Irish Customs Deputy Director General Anthony Buckley told a conference in Dublin. Customs staff are evaluating technologi­es such as traffic surveillan­ce and computeris­ed pre-authorisat­ion of importers and exporters.

“In autumn, we begin serious work ... we reckon it will take us two or three years to build,” Buckley said.

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