WEDNESDAY, April 24, 2024
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Why an Irish ‘hard border’ is a necessity

Why an Irish ‘hard border’ is a necessity

Re: “No-deal Brexit would threaten peace and prosperity”, Have Your Say, May 29.

There is unlikely to be much peace and prosperity remaining in the Emerald Isle under its “Ireland 2040” policy. Leo Varadkar, Ireland’s homosexual premier of foreign origin, seeks to bring in a further one million immigrants, increasing the existing population by more than a fifth. The major cities are already suffering escalating migrant crime like those of western Europe. Dublin’s Gardai (the police) report that African gangs are “wreaking havoc”, intimidating and attacking old-age pensioners and children, and they have now introduced police hijabs and turbans in a feeble attempt to signal “diversity”. But the biggest tragedy is in the countryside, where the unique Irish rural culture is being eradicated by enforced influxes of migrants into tiny villages, without the consent of the residents.
Ian Martin, Have Your Say’s “Project Fear” commentator, bemoans the re-imposition of a “hard border – one that requires passport and customs checks” between the country and Northern Ireland. It has been demonstrated that customs checks can be dealt with electronically, off-site, but the border is already acting as an illegal migration route from Europe into Britain. With a million or more migrants flooding into Ireland over the next two decades, the hard border can’t come quickly enough, I would suggest.
Nigel Pike
Phang Nga 

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