The Scotsman

SCOTTISH PERSPECTIV­E

Ulster’s old certaintie­s are taking a battering as both sides realise they want is a ‘hard’ border, writes Lesley Riddoch

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Scotland is not the only part of the UK contemplat­ing a new constituti­onal future after last month’s Brexit vote. Mutinous talk is spreading in Northern Ireland – the only other nation to register a Remain vote.

Protestant unionists are queuing for Irish passports and nationalis­ts are openly campaignin­g for a united Ireland – spurred on by Sinn Fein’s proposal for a referendum.

That option has been ruled out by the Leave-supporting First Minister Arlene Foster, David Cameron and the Irish government. But it could be a slow burner – an idea that roars into life if the predicted cross-border chaos of Brexit becomes a reality. Already personalit­ies like golfer Rory Mcelroy have backed open discussion, saying last week; “If I’m Northern Irish, what’s better? To be part of the UK and not be in the EU? Or to be in a united Ireland and still belong to the EU? People are going to have to weigh that up.”

Politician­s will also have to weigh up changing demographi­cs. While higher birth rates among Catholics suggest they will become the majority in Northern Ireland within a generation, opinion polls consistent­ly show most Catholics still favour membership of the UK. According to Peter Shirlow, of the Institute of Irish Studies at Liverpool University though, a future referendum on Irish unificatio­n could be “very, very tight” if Brexit erodes Catholic support for the Union. Steven Agnew, the leader of the Northern Irish Greens agrees; “People are saying for the first time in their life they would vote for a united Ireland, having never contemplat­ed it before.”

There’s wild talk of even more radical solutions. Since the heavily indebted province is too small to go it alone, a Celtic Union between Scotland, Ireland and Northern Ireland would be a more attractive prospect for Northern Ireland’s Unionists than reunificat­ion with the Republic alone. Such an “Arc of Craic” stands absolutely no chance of happening, but shows how much the Brexit vote has prompted voters from both traditions to think the unthinkabl­e and imagine the impossible.

The 145 inhabitant­s of Rathlin island have even launched a campaign to reestablis­h links with Scotland so they can remain inside the EU if a second Scottish indyref is successful. Rathlin – six miles off the Antrim coast and 12 miles west of Kintyre – was isolated and struggling to survive economical­ly until European funding helped build a new harbour and a National Grid connection. Ra th lin also has historic( if mostly mythic) links with Scotland. Robert the Bruce reputedly encountere­d his famous spider there and the island only entered Irish jurisdicti­on in 1617, when the death of a snake “proved” the island was subject to St Patrick’s serpent-expelling control.

Of course, all of this has more than a touch of the Blarney about it. But the prospect of a post-brexit meltdown in Northern Ireland is deadly serious. Just as EU law underpins the foundation of the Scottish Parliament, membership of the European Union was a cornerston­e of the 1998 Good Friday agreement which ended decades of fighting over Northern Ireland’s constituti­onal position. The Common Travel Area which allows virtually free passage between Ireland and Northern Ireland only works because both states are EU members. EU rules allowing British and Irish citizens to work, claim benefits and get hospital treatment in either country are used on a daily basis by tens of thousands of people in Ireland. And all these arrangemen­ts are now at risk.

The Ulster Bank has warned that uncertaint­y around Brexit could make Northern Ireland a “no-go zone” for foreign investment and the head of the British-irish Chamber of Commerce says those who think saved Euro cash will be spent on Northern Ireland should realise “that isn’t going to happen”.

Veteran diplomat Richard Haass – a former US special envoy for Northern Ireland – has predicted that; “In five years there will no longer be a UK, Scotland will be independen­t and part of Europe. Less certain but quite possibly all or part of Northern Ireland will join Ireland.”

That may sound unlikely but during a trip to Belfast last week, two of the film crew I worked with believe they will soon become illegal immigrants. A trainee camera operator from Cavan and a producer with an American passport are both deciding where their future lies – beyond the UK. That’s the harbinger of a skills gap Northern Ireland simply cannot afford.

“Illegals” are also thinking further ahead than UK politician­s. They predict that Brexit will prompt the creation of Fortress England since neither part of Ireland wants a hard border – partly because of cost but mostly because of the danger of re-igniting the Troubles. One man put it bluntly; “If they build a hard border, dissident Republican­s will blow it up. Then the police will call in the army and you’re right back to 1968 [when the Troubles began].”

So if neither part of Ireland wants an internal border, where will it be? The French have said their controvers­ial camp at Calais will be dismantled once the UK leaves Europe and the British will have to deal with immigratio­n themselves at Dover. Ireland may follow suit, leaving the UK government to set up border controls at ports like Fishguard, Holyhead, Stranraer and at UK airports. If that happens, British citizens travelling from Northern Ireland will face the same customs and border controls entering mainland Britain as citizens of the Irish Republic. The potential for delay, anger and political friction is obvious.

“Irexit” campaigner­s argue an In-out referendum on continuing EU membership is the only answer. They point out Ireland became a net EU contributo­r last year for the first time since 1973, Ireland’s low corporatio­n tax may be under threat if EU plans for continent-wide “tax-harmonisat­ion” go ahead, and border patrols could be avoided if the Republic and the UK are both outside the EU. Nonetheles­s, a recent online poll of 40,000 Irish voters found 69 per cent don’t want such a referendum -yet.

Amidst all the Brexit-generated uncertaint­y, two things looks clear. Carefully negotiated border arrangemen­ts in Ireland will soon be kicked into touch and London-based politician­s don’t seem to care what chaos that will bring.

As events “celebratin­g” the Twelfth of July take place this week, who knows where such painful realisatio­ns will leave the people of Northern Ireland?

 ??  ?? 0 Martin Mcguinness (centre) and Gerry Adams (left) respond outside Stormont to news of the Brexit vote
0 Martin Mcguinness (centre) and Gerry Adams (left) respond outside Stormont to news of the Brexit vote
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