Politics

Flashback: To when Boris Johnson dismantled claims of a hard border in the Irish Sea

Footage of Boris Johnson dismantling claims that there will be a hard border in the Irish Sea has been making the rounds on social media as tensions continue to boil over in Northern Ireland.

Despite loyalists urging their communities to desist from protest activity following the death of Prince Philip, there continued to be small pockets of unrest last night.

Police were attacked with missiles and a car was set on fire at Tiger Bay, a loyalist area in north Belfast with riot vans and police dogs in tow.

Some officers came under attack, with missiles such as stones and bottles thrown at them, and reports of petrol bombs being used.

There was a heavy police presence in the area overnight, with reports that stones were also thrown at officers in the nearby, nationalist area New Lodge.

Peace project “cracking at the seams

Earlier this week politicians were warned that the peace project was “cracking at the seams” on the back of a Brexit deal secured in December which put a hard border down the Irish Sea.

Just one year earlier as Boris Johnson prepared to take the Conservatives into a general election, the prime minister said he was “one million per cent committed” to maintaining the union with Northern Ireland while dismissing claims that a border would have to be put in place.

When asked a question about a possible border in Ireland he said: “I believe in it passionately and there will be no border down the Irish sea.

“The whole point of our deal was to allow the whole UK to come out of the EU, whole and entire, but what the EU wanted was to offer a northern Ireland only backstop as they refer to it which would have kept Northern Ireland in the customs union, in the single market, forever.”

When asked if there would be a customs border down the Irish sea, the PM replied: “Absolutely not, if you read the agreement it says explicitly Northern Ireland is part of the UK customs territory.”

Related: Historian blames EU for Northern Ireland violence- saying they made Boris sign the deal

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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