The Sligo Champion

ICMSA attack French farmers’ call for ‘ Hard’ agri border between Republic and Northern Ireland

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THE President of the Irish Creamery Milk Suppliers Associatio­n ( ICMSA) has described the call made by a French farm leader for a ‘ hard’ border between Northern Ireland and the Republic as “disappoint­ingly self- centred”. Mr. John Comer was reacting to comments by Christophe Hillairet, a council member of COPA and the leader of an influentia­l regional French farmers associatio­n, in which Mon. Hillairet said that he was afraid that the UK would sign agreements to import food from the Commonweal­th and that he was particular­ly concerned by how these imports might find their way into the Republic and the wider EU.

Quoted in the widely respected Agra Europe, Monsieur Hillairet is quoted as saying that “Ireland is a big problem but for the French farmer we will need to have a hard border between the north and the Republic as otherwise we will have a lot of products that will cross from north to south. That would be very dangerous for our producers.”

Mr Comer said the comments were at best premature and could more frankly be described as self- centred. He said that Monsieur Hillairet must be aware of the very recent history of suffering and conflict in precisely that border region whose avoidance would continue to take clear precedence over the anxieties of French farm groups as far as both Ireland and the United Kingdom were concerned. These were farming and rural communitie­s, Mr Comer explained, who owned lands and collected and processed milk in plants on both sides of the border. He said that the farming communitie­s concerned had every right to expect that the EU and the UK would continue – so far as was possible with goodwill and intelligen­ce - to facilitate that absolutely natural process. As to Monsieur Hillairet’s express fear that lamb from New Zealand could arrive in Northern Ireland and cross a ‘ soft’ border into the Republic before entering the mainland EU markets, Mr Comer said that there was already a whole ‘ Third- Country- Of- Origin’ labelling procedure worked out and operated satisfacto­rily throughout the EU and the UK’s continued adherence to that procedure could be negotiated as part of the overall process. What was more important, said the ICMSA President, was that EU farm leaders showed some degree of solidarity and commitment to the Irish farming communitie­s who were – by a considerab­le margin – the most affected sector within the EU both in economic and practical terms.

“The only people who would have enjoyed reading Monsieur Hillariet’s comments were the very anti- EU British Euroscepti­cs who want to play the different Member States off against each other and who want to forment that feeling of tension between different sectors and nations. That must not happen and with respect to our French friends we would prefer them to reflect on the common good and not just on their own particular sectoral anxieties”, said Mr Comer.

 ??  ?? Comer said the French call was self- centred.
Comer said the French call was self- centred.

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