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How Brexit could create a crisis at the Irish border - YouTube
Channel: Vox
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As part of the European Union, the United
Kingdom's borders have been relatively open
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for years.
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Trade's carried out freely with other member
countries and people coming through only need
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to show their EU passport.
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But in June 2016, the UK voted to leave the
EU so that it could reassert control on its
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own borders - and decide who and what it wanted
to let through.
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Imagine these boundaries turning into hard
borders.
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The impact of that on these maritime borders
is complicated in terms of trade,
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but it could have serious implications for
the people living along the UK’s only
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overland border — here.
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This border, between Northern Ireland and
the Republic of Ireland, is one of the reasons
[42]
why Brexit negotiations continue to reach
a deadlock.
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That’s because this isn’t just a boundary
between two countries...
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It’s also a compromise.
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A symbol of identity.
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A solution to a troubled history.
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And it’s been keeping the peace in Northern
Ireland for 20 years.
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Hardening this border could put one of Europe’s
greatest success stories in jeopardy.
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This border was first drawn in 1920 by the
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British, who had ruled over the island for
centuries.
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The Irish had rebelled several times, but
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not everyone wanted the British to leave.
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So, eventually the UK divided the island into
two states based on its population.
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Most people in this part were historically
Catholic, and identified as Irish, and wanted
[89]
independence.
[90]
They were known as Nationalists.
[92]
But in the North, many people were
Protestant, identified more closely as British
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and wanted to stay in the UK.
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They were called Unionists.
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After the partition, this part remained in
the UK as Northern Ireland.
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We made that decision as a people quite freely, and for very definite reasons.
[109]
Reasons that are historical, reasons that are cultural, and reasons that are economic.
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The south continued to move away from
the UK until it gained complete independence
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and became a new country -- the Republic of
Ireland.
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At first, this 499 kilometer border was pretty
porous.
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But the UK and Ireland continued to be hostile.
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Over time, customs checks were set up at the border
crossings and the two countries descended into
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a trade war - tariffs were placed on agricultural
produce and goods like steel and coal.
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By the late 1960s, things turned violent.
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Violence like this hit Northern Ireland after years of simmering bitterness between the Catholic minority
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and the ruling Protestant regime.
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In Northern Ireland, fierce conflict broke
out between extremist groups.
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Nationalist paramilitaries, like the Irish
Republican Army, believed that Northern Ireland
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was rightfully part of Ireland and that the
British were oppressors of Northern Ireland's
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Nationalist population.
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Unionist paramilitaries fought back; defending
their place in the UK.
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Both groups blew up buildings, set off car
bombs, and engaged in bloody street fighting.
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The UK deployed thousands of troops to Northern
Ireland during this time; and became a common
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target of Nationalist paramilitary attacks.
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Especially at the border, which for Nationalists
was the ultimate symbol of British occupation.
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"Welsh fuseliers who patrol this stretch of the border
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described in court as the main battle line between the IRA and the army,
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have suffered repeated attacks."
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As violence surged, the UK military tried
to secure the border with walls, towers, heavy
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guns, and patrols.
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They tightly controlled the 20 official crossings
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and screened people and vehicles passing through.
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The conflict over Northern Ireland turned
this into a hard border.
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The violence lasted for more than 30 years,
killed over 3,600 people and came to be known
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as The Troubles.
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It came to end in 1998, when Nationalist
and Unionist Party leaders came together for
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a historic peace deal.
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They reached a compromise: Northern Ireland
would remain in the UK but people would be
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eligible for both Irish and UK citizenships.
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And in the future, Northern Ireland could
vote to join Ireland.
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This deal came to be known as the Good Friday
Agreement.
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It allowed Nationalists in Northern Ireland
to be part of the Republic of Ireland while
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the Unionists remained part of the UK.
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Which meant this hard border wasn’t needed
anymore.
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So, the British military left.
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The watchtowers came down.
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And more roads opened.
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There are now around 270 official crossings
- most of which are completely invisible.
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And they're all part of a border that stands
as a symbol of the compromise that ended decades
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of conflict.
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"The British people have voted to leave the European Union."
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"Reignited a fierce debate over Northern Ireland's future."
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"Because both are members of the European Union.
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But when Britain pulls out of the EU,"
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"it's now an outer-EU border and the question is,
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do we put up barbed wire again? Soldiers? There'll be a custom borders at the very least."
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In June 2016, the UK voted to leave the EU, even
though Northern Ireland was overwhelmingly
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in favor of remaining.
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The UK’s argument in favor of Brexit was
to control its own national borders — but
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there was little mention of its Irish border
at the time.
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That changed when the UK and EU started negotiations
-- the status of the Irish border became one
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of the first three things to figure out.
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Now, more than a year later, it’s still
unresolved.
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But there are a few options:
The UK could reimpose a hard border by bringing
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back the police and the walls.
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But that would isolate the population of Nationalists
in Northern Ireland.
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Alternatively, they could put the border here,
leaving Northern Ireland in the EU Customs Union,
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but separating it from the UK mainland.
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But this would betray the Unionists.
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See, either way, both these options risk
violating the Good Friday Agreement.
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A third option is for the UK to stay in the
EU Customs Union meaning it wouldn't need a
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customs border, but that’s unacceptable
for Brexiters in the UK government, who specifically
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want control over their own borders.
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The UK needs to put a border somewhere but
just can't decide where.
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“On relation to the border between Northern Ireland and Ireland,
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we will not return to a hard border between Northern Ireland
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and Ireland”.
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“But the suggestion that there should be a border down the Irish Sea,
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separating Northern Ireland from the rest of the
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United Kingdom is completely unacceptable."
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"We are not going to
be in a customs union, we’re not going to
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be in the Customs Union, because if we were, that would prevent us
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from being able to follow an independent trade policy.”
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Now, there's a fourth option that would be in
line with the Good Friday Agreement — it’s
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the idea of reunification.
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In the past when both Ireland and the UK were
in the EU and the borders were open; there
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was little incentive for Northern Ireland
to vote to reunite with the Republic of Ireland.
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But if the UK went with the option of hard
borders, Northern Ireland would be isolated
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and the only way to rejoin the EU would be
through reunification.
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Typically, this would be an overwhelming victory
for the Nationalists and a loss for the Unionists.
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But Brexit seems to have changed some opinions.
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A recent poll found that 28% of the respondents
who supported Northern Ireland’s place in
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the UK would now vote to join the Republic
of Ireland.
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While not a perfect solution, it would give
Northern Ireland a voice about its own place
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in Europe; a voice that’s barely been heard
so far.
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