The Independent

MEP admits Brexit stoked sectarian divisions in Northern Ireland

- JOE WATTS POLITICAL EDITOR

A leading Brexiteer has admitted that the run-up to the EU referendum saw an increase in sectarian behaviour in Northern Ireland. Conservati­ve MEP Dan Hannan said that divisive behaviour between Protestant­s and Catholics returned as Brexit drove a wedge through communitie­s.

His comments come amid concern about what will happen to the land border between Northern Ireland

and the Republic and whether checks will be imposed on people trying to cross it. Writing a column for the Conservati­ve Home website he said: “Tribal politics, which had been fading in Northern Ireland, made something of a comeback in the run-up to 23 June. I noticed audiences self-segregatin­g frostily on more than one occasion.

“Being of Scottish Presbyteri­an origin on one side and Ulster Catholic on the other, I’m perhaps more alert to sectariani­sm than most English people, and I’ve always loathed it.” Mr Hannan went on to say there was no need to reinstate a land frontier between the north and the south in Ireland. He said: “No political party in London or Dublin is proposing such a thing. With a modicum of common sense, the present arrangemen­ts can be maintained.”

He argued that UK immigratio­n policy is based not on turning people back at borders, but on knowing they are in the country. He explained: “Those who enter legally but linger illegally are unable to apply for a National Insurance number and, if they are picked up by the authoritie­s for any reason – a driving offence, say – face deportatio­n. The only thing necessary to keep the current system in place is for Ireland and the UK to agree, as part of the Common Travel Area, to share all data on who has entered their territorie­s.”

 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Daniel Hannan was a key leave campaigner
(AFP/Getty) Daniel Hannan was a key leave campaigner

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