Europe

Leo Varadker: Irish PM says his government will not design 'Brexiteer border'

A bus travels over the Irish border Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Finding a solution to the Irish border issue is one of the main challenges of Brexit

The Irish government will not design a border for Brexiteers, Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Leo Varadkar has said.

He said his government did not want to see any kind of economic border on the island of Ireland when the UK leaves the European Union.

Mr Varadker said he hoped unionists would not respond angrily to his position.

"It is the British and the Brexiteers who are leaving, so if anyone should be angry it's us quite frankly," he added.

Earlier, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney denied a newspaper report that suggested the Irish government preferred a "sea border" solution with checks at ports rather than the Irish border.

The Times report suggested Mr Varadkar wanted customs and immigration checks at ports, rather than any checks along the land border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

Image copyright PA
Image caption Leo Varadkar said both he and his foreign minister Simon Coveney were on the same page on border issues

Sources told the paper that Mr Varadkar believes a land border would jeopardise the peace process.

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) criticised the suggestion as "madness."

DUP MP Sir Jeffrey Donaldson told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "That's just not going to happen."

"There is no way that the DUP would go for an option that put a border between one part of the UK and another.

"That would be a bit like saying we're going to create a border between California and the rest of the USA.

"I think what Dublin needs to think about is innovative ways in which it can move its market closer to the UK."

Sir Jeffrey claimed that 65% of goods exported by the Republic of Ireland go to the UK.

But that figure is incorrect - exports to the UK amounted to 12.8% of trade in 2016, according to the Irish government

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Media captionSir Jeffrey Donaldson tells Today idea of a sea border between Ireland and UK is "absurd"

But Mr Coveney told Irish national broadcaster, RTÉ: "There is no proposal that is suggesting that there be a border in the Irish Sea,"

He said the onus was on the UK to "come up with imaginative and if necessary unique solutions" to avoiding a so-called hard border.

Mr Coveney said a political solution was required, rather than a technical fix, which has been suggested by Brexit Secretary David Davis.

Mr Davis has proposed using measures like surveillance cameras to allow free movement between the north and south of the island.

The foreign minister added that the Irish government will not support proposals that result in checkpoints along the Irish border.

Image copyright Reuters
Image caption The onus is on the UK to come up with a solution for the Irish border, said Simon Coveney

Addressing reporters on Friday afternoon, the Taoiseach, Mr Varadkar, said both he and Mr Coveney were on the same page on the issue.

But the taoiseach added that if the British government wanted technological solutions to the border, that was up to them.

Mr Varadkar said the Irish government would not do that work for them.

The Irish border is one of the key issues that needs to be resolved by the UK and the EU before talks begin on a new trade deal.

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