The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Fife woman fears being forced to leave country

Belgian national says her bags have been ‘half-packed’ since Brexit vote

- Kieran andrews poliTical ediTor kiandrews@thecourier.co.uk

A Fife woman fears being forced out of the country following the UK’s decision to leave the EU, despite having called Scotland her home for almost 30 years.

Belgian national Alexia Grosjean said she has growing concerns about visiting family in Sweden in case if affects her ability to continue her life in Tayport.

The UK Government has so far refused to guarantee the rights of EU citizens in Britain following the Brexit vote, although there has been no suggestion there will be any immediate change to their rights.

“I’m genuinely hesitant,” the 49-yearold said about the upcoming trip to Scandinavi­a.

“What happens if I go away and they have changed the regulation­s while I’m gone and I can’t come home to my husband?

“I never thought I would say that. This (feeling) has been increasing steadily in the last two or three months. Before it had never crossed my mind.

“It’s like everything is up in the air. I am very, very unsure about my future in this country. My husband is Scottish and all my friends are settled here.”

Ms Grosjean, whose father was decorated for fighting with the Belgian resistance during the Second World War, has lived in Fife since 2004 and is married to Professor Steve Murdoch, of St Andrews University.

The couple have published history books together.

She now works mostly as a translator and proof reader, having moved to Scotland in 1988 to study at Aberdeen University.

A move away is being contemplat­ed after 28 years living in the north east.

“Ever since the EU referendum result we have looked at each other and I have said that my bags are half-packed,” Ms Grosjean said.

“It makes me angry. It is not because I am choosing to go. I feel forced out, although to be fair it’s not because of Scotland.”

A spokesman for the UK Government’s Department for Exiting the EU said: “We have been clear that we want to protect the status of EU nationals already living in the UK and the only circumstan­ces in which that wouldn’t be possible is if British citizens’ rights in the EU were not protected in return.”

 ??  ?? Uncertain future: Alexia Grosjean, from Belgium, has lived in Scotland for nearly 30 years.
Uncertain future: Alexia Grosjean, from Belgium, has lived in Scotland for nearly 30 years.

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