Guernsey Press

Brexit uncertainty is causing fear, warn NI border town residents

Warrenpoint in Co Down is just a short distance across Carlingford Lough from the Irish Republic.

Published

Uncertainty around the Irish border following the UK’s departure from the EU is causing fear, residents of a frontier town have warned.

Warrenpoint hosts one of Northern Ireland’s busiest ports which handled 3.6 million tonnes of cargo in 2018, while fishermen land tens of thousands of pounds worth of catch at the marina.

From pleasure sailors at the Co Down town’s waterfront to shoppers on the streets and workers in the shops, there was concern on Wednesday over the UK’s acknowledgement there would be new customs checks for cross-border trade.

Brexit
Warrenpoint Port seen from Flagstaff Viewpoint on the hills outside Newry, showing Carlingford Lough running between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic. (Liam McBurney/PA)

However there was fear of the unknown in Warrenpoint where a plan to sell the town’s former police station, once bombed during the Troubles, was halted due to uncertainty over Brexit.

And there were questions over how the Government proposals would work given the length of the 310-mile border in Ireland, and its complexity, across privately owned land in some places and waterways in others.

The sale of the former Warrenpoint police station was halted amid uncertainty around Brexit. (Rebecca Black/PA)

Local man Tony Poland said he could simply sail a small boat the short distance across Carlingford Lough to the Irish Republic.

He was adamant that physical check points on the border should never return.

“We should never go back to it,” he told the PA news agency.

Tony Poland is concerned about the impact of potential customs checks on the Irish border after Brexit. (Rebecca Black/PA)

“People do not want customs checks.”

Pat O’Malley, who is originally from Co Mayo and moved to the town when he married his wife, said he would be strongly against uniformed check points on the border.

“It is all a bit of a mess really,” he said.

Emma McCann from Newry, who runs a fast food van in Warrenpoint, said she is concerned about the situation, adding she does not understand much of the detail, and what the implications will be for her life and business.

A retired man, who did not wish to be named, said he feels the uncertainty over what will happen is causing fear in the area.

He sails a pleasure boat in the area and said there has been no guidance on any potential restrictions which may be placed on where his boat can go.

“I find the whole thing a bit difficult to understand, it seems to go from one thing to another, if anything I have pulled back from it, sick to the teeth with it,” he said.

“One of my concerns will be things like going to the airport, most people here would fly from Dublin, it’s just an hour’s drive compared to an hour and 20 minutes to Belfast, how would customs checks affect that.”

Meanwhile Polish-born Andrzej Filipczuk said he still believes Brexit will not happen.

“I’m completely against it, I still believe it won’t happen,” said the shop worker.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.