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  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02154.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02099.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02146.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02123.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02097.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02109.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02088.JPG
  • Bonfire near customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01875.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01895.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01871.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01870.JPG
  • Customs posts at Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01863.JPG
  • ‘Welcome to Northern Ireland’, the word northern painted over. At the border of Ireland with Northern Ireland south of Newry, north of County Louth. Its the A1 Road in the north and N1 (National Primary Road) in the south. Easy to change your Euros for pounds, buy cheap petrol one side of the border, cheap drink the other. Many business exist because of the open borders. A hard border would gravely affect the economy of the border counties, and Ireland as a whole
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02093.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02497.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02506.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02489.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02449.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02439.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02447.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02431.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02423.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02406.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02401.JPG
  • UDA stronghold. Their kerb-stones and lampposts painted red, white and blue like the Union Jack, this walled off loyalist protestant enclave 'The Fountain’ is inside Derry’s city walls. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom. 
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02404.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02376.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02384.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02359.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02347.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02321.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02278.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02277.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02284.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02267.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02247.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02224.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02189.JPG
  • Bogside Murals. Revolutionary images of freedom fighters, including the the Petrol bomber mural by Bogside Artists, depicts Paddy Coyle, inspired by a photo by Clive Limpkin shot in the late sixties, when there were lots of running battles, between the Republican Irish kids and the RUC police (Royal Union Constabulary), with molotov cocktails, and CS gas. Around 3,600 people were killed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. If a hard Brexit produces a fixed border in Ireland, this peace agreement could be destroyed and the violence could start again.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02169.JPG
  • Cheap meat on sale in a service station garage supermarket in Muff in Ireland near the Londonderry border. Economies on both sides of the border thrive with the open access. Once there is a hard border everyone, especially on the frontier borderlands will lose out, if trade is controlled in a hard border economy
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02800.JPG
  • Cheap meat on sale in a service station garage supermarket in Muff in Ireland near the Londonderry border. Economies on both sides of the border thrive with the open access. Once there is a hard border everyone, especially on the frontier borderlands will lose out, if trade is controlled in a hard border economy
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02797.JPG
  • Borderland now a clothes shop in Muff is on the border with Northern Ireland near Londonderry. It sells a range of workwear, sportswear, outdoorwear, clothes, shoes. The shop is on the site and in the original building of an old disco famous in the 1980s. One of the businesses that will be badly hit with a hard border policy
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02791.JPG
  • Borderland now a clothes shop in Muff is on the border with Northern Ireland near Londonderry. It sells a range of workwear, sportswear, outdoorwear, clothes, shoes. The shop is on the site and in the original building of an old disco famous in the 1980s. One of the businesses that will be badly hit with a hard border policy
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02788.JPG
  • Borderland now a clothes shop in Muff is on the border with Northern Ireland near Londonderry. It sells a range of workwear, sportswear, outdoorwear, clothes, shoes. The shop is on the site and in the original building of an old disco famous in the 1980s. One of the businesses that will be badly hit with a hard border policy
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02769.JPG
  • Borderland now a clothes shop in Muff is on the border with Northern Ireland near Londonderry. It sells a range of workwear, sportswear, outdoorwear, clothes, shoes. The shop is on the site and in the original building of an old disco famous in the 1980s. One of the businesses that will be badly hit with a hard border policy
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02749.JPG
  • Borderland now a clothes shop in Muff is on the border with Northern Ireland near Londonderry. It sells a range of workwear, sportswear, outdoorwear, clothes, shoes. The shop is on the site and in the original building of an old disco famous in the 1980s. One of the businesses that will be badly hit with a hard border policy
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02760.JPG
  • Lincoln Court and Auglish Court Loyalist areas Londonderry. Many loyalist murals about the British Military machine, with images depicting and glorifying  destroyers, tanks and other weapons of war are on display. red, white and blue for the Union Jack. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02735.JPG
  • Lincoln Court and Auglish Court Loyalist areas Londonderry. Many loyalist murals about the British Military machine, with images depicting and glorifying  destroyers, tanks and other weapons of war are on display. red, white and blue for the Union Jack. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02737.JPG
  • Lincoln Court and Auglish Court Loyalist areas Londonderry. Many loyalist murals about the British Military machine, with images depicting and glorifying  destroyers, tanks and other weapons of war are on display. red, white and blue for the Union Jack. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02731.JPG
  • Bonds Street Loyalist area with many loyalist murals about the British Military machine, with images depicting and glorifying  destroyers, tanks and other weapons of war are on display. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02715.JPG
  • Bonds Street Loyalist area with many loyalist murals about the British Military machine, with images depicting and glorifying  destroyers, tanks and other weapons of war are on display. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02675.JPG
  • Bonds Street Loyalist area with many loyalist murals about the British Military machine, with images depicting and glorifying  destroyers, tanks and other weapons of war are on display. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02676.JPG
  • Bonds Street Loyalist area with many loyalist murals about the British Military machine, with images depicting and glorifying  destroyers, tanks and other weapons of war are on display. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02663.JPG
  • The Peace Bridge is a cycle and foot bridge across the River Foyle in Derry, Northern Ireland. It opened on 25 June 2011, connecting Ebrington Square with the rest of the city centre. It is the newest of three bridges in the city, the others being the Craigavon Bridge and the Foyle Bridge. The 235 metres (771 ft) bridge was designed by AECOM,<br />
<br />
The bridge was opened to the public by EU Commissioner for Regional Policy, Johannes Hahn; accompanied by the First and deputy First Ministers, Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness; and the Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny. It is intended to improve relations between the largely unionist 'Waterside' with the largely nationalist 'Cityside', by improving access between these areas, as part of wider regeneration plans. The bridge also provides a crossing over the railway line approaching Waterside station
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02634.JPG
  • The Peace Bridge is a cycle and foot bridge across the River Foyle in Derry, Northern Ireland. It opened on 25 June 2011, connecting Ebrington Square with the rest of the city centre. It is the newest of three bridges in the city, the others being the Craigavon Bridge and the Foyle Bridge. The 235 metres (771 ft) bridge was designed by AECOM,<br />
<br />
The bridge was opened to the public by EU Commissioner for Regional Policy, Johannes Hahn; accompanied by the First and deputy First Ministers, Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness; and the Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny. It is intended to improve relations between the largely unionist 'Waterside' with the largely nationalist 'Cityside', by improving access between these areas, as part of wider regeneration plans. The bridge also provides a crossing over the railway line approaching Waterside station
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02628.JPG
  • The Peace Bridge is a cycle and foot bridge across the River Foyle in Derry, Northern Ireland. It opened on 25 June 2011, connecting Ebrington Square with the rest of the city centre. It is the newest of three bridges in the city, the others being the Craigavon Bridge and the Foyle Bridge. The 235 metres (771 ft) bridge was designed by AECOM,<br />
<br />
The bridge was opened to the public by EU Commissioner for Regional Policy, Johannes Hahn; accompanied by the First and deputy First Ministers, Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness; and the Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny. It is intended to improve relations between the largely unionist 'Waterside' with the largely nationalist 'Cityside', by improving access between these areas, as part of wider regeneration plans. The bridge also provides a crossing over the railway line approaching Waterside station
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02633.JPG
  • The Peace Bridge is a cycle and foot bridge across the River Foyle in Derry, Northern Ireland. It opened on 25 June 2011, connecting Ebrington Square with the rest of the city centre. It is the newest of three bridges in the city, the others being the Craigavon Bridge and the Foyle Bridge. The 235 metres (771 ft) bridge was designed by AECOM,<br />
<br />
The bridge was opened to the public by EU Commissioner for Regional Policy, Johannes Hahn; accompanied by the First and deputy First Ministers, Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness; and the Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny. It is intended to improve relations between the largely unionist 'Waterside' with the largely nationalist 'Cityside', by improving access between these areas, as part of wider regeneration plans. The bridge also provides a crossing over the railway line approaching Waterside station
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02069.JPG
  • The Peace Bridge is a cycle and foot bridge across the River Foyle in Derry, Northern Ireland. It opened on 25 June 2011, connecting Ebrington Square with the rest of the city centre. It is the newest of three bridges in the city, the others being the Craigavon Bridge and the Foyle Bridge. The 235 metres (771 ft) bridge was designed by AECOM,<br />
<br />
The bridge was opened to the public by EU Commissioner for Regional Policy, Johannes Hahn; accompanied by the First and deputy First Ministers, Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness; and the Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny. It is intended to improve relations between the largely unionist 'Waterside' with the largely nationalist 'Cityside', by improving access between these areas, as part of wider regeneration plans. The bridge also provides a crossing over the railway line approaching Waterside station
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02050.JPG
  • Castlederg fortified police station, on the Castlefin road, was at the centre of the ’Troubles’, just south of Derry. In the light of a possible hard border in Ireland, the sale and demolition of this old police station has been postponed. There are also reports are that another 300 police officers might be needed to police the new border. Republicans are for the demolition of this heavily militarised police station whilst Unionists are not
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02043.JPG
  • Castlederg fortified police station, on the Castlefin road, was at the centre of the ’Troubles’, just south of Derry. In the light of a possible hard border in Ireland, the sale and demolition of this old police station has been postponed. There are also reports are that another 300 police officers might be needed to police the new border. Republicans are for the demolition of this heavily militarised police station whilst Unionists are not
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02026.JPG
  • Castlederg fortified police station, on the Castlefin road, was at the centre of the ’Troubles’, just south of Derry. In the light of a possible hard border in Ireland, the sale and demolition of this old police station has been postponed. There are also reports are that another 300 police officers might be needed to police the new border. Republicans are for the demolition of this heavily militarised police station whilst Unionists are not
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02004.JPG
  • Castlederg fortified police station, on the Castlefin road, was at the centre of the ’Troubles’, just south of Derry. In the light of a possible hard border in Ireland, the sale and demolition of this old police station has been postponed. There are also reports are that another 300 police officers might be needed to police the new border. Republicans are for the demolition of this heavily militarised police station whilst Unionists are not
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01985.JPG
  • ‘Welcome to Northern Ireland’, the word northern shot to bits. Lorries speed past, their lights like tracer bullets. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. This sign is on the R205 Road north of County Cavan in Ireland, just north of the border of Northern Ireland near Killycluggan, on the road to Enniskillen.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01976.JPG
  • ‘Welcome to Northern Ireland’, the word northern shot to bits. Lorries speed past, their lights like tracer bullets. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. This sign is on the R205 Road north of County Cavan in Ireland, just north of the border of Northern Ireland near Killycluggan, on the road to Enniskillen.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01971.JPG
  • ‘Welcome to Northern Ireland’, the word northern shot to bits. Lorries speed past, their lights like tracer bullets. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. This sign is on the R205 Road north of County Cavan in Ireland, just north of the border of Northern Ireland near Killycluggan, on the road to Enniskillen.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01968.JPG
  • ‘Welcome to Northern Ireland’, the word northern shot to bits. Lorries speed past, their lights like tracer bullets. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. This sign is on the R205 Road north of County Cavan in Ireland, just north of the border of Northern Ireland near Killycluggan, on the road to Enniskillen.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01961.JPG
  • ‘Welcome to Northern Ireland’, the word northern shot to bits. Lorries speed past, their lights like tracer bullets. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. This sign is on the R205 Road north of County Cavan in Ireland, just north of the border of Northern Ireland near Killycluggan, on the road to Enniskillen.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01956.JPG
  • Exactly on the border crossing on the Dublin Road (Dublin to Belfast). N1 at the border of Ireland with Northern Ireland south of Newry, north of County Louth. Its the A1 Road in the north and N1 (National Primary Road) in the south. Easy to change your Euros for pounds, buy cheap petrol one side of the border, cheap drink the other. Many business exist because of the open borders. A hard border would gravely affect the economy of the border counties, and Ireland as a whole
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01951.JPG
  • Exactly on the border crossing on the Dublin Road (Dublin to Belfast). N1 at the border of Ireland with Northern Ireland south of Newry, north of County Louth. Its the A1 Road in the north and N1 (National Primary Road) in the south. Easy to change your Euros for pounds, buy cheap petrol one side of the border, cheap drink the other. Many business exist because of the open borders. A hard border would gravely affect the economy of the border counties, and Ireland as a whole
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01918.JPG
  • Exactly on the border crossing on the Dublin Road (Dublin to Belfast). N1 at the border of Ireland with Northern Ireland south of Newry, north of County Louth. Its the A1 Road in the north and N1 (National Primary Road) in the south. Easy to change your Euros for pounds, buy cheap petrol one side of the border, cheap drink the other. Many business exist because of the open borders. A hard border would gravely affect the economy of the border counties, and Ireland as a whole
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01906.JPG
  • Lorries going across the frontier between Ireland and Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01797.JPG
  • Lorries going across the frontier between Ireland and Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01783.JPG
  • Lorries going across the frontier between Ireland and Northern Ireland border south of Newry. The Republican Irish people do not recognise Ireland as being separated by borders, as they don’t use the word London just Derry. There are over a hundred ‘peace walls’ or security barriers dotted around Northern Ireland. In some areas the barriers are coming down. However with the possibility of Brexit and hard borders the problems existing between communities can escalate, the Good Friday Agreement scuppered and violence threatens to come back
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC01790.JPG
  • A mural of Bobby Sands, a poet, prisoner, revolutionary and IRA volunteer, the most famous hunger striker who died in the H-block and became a martyr for the cause of the Irish Republican Army. This mural adorns the side of the building housing the Sinn Fein, political wing of the Republican, headquarters on Falls Road Belfast.
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03075.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall on Falls road estate. Other side of this wall in Shankhill Road.  The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03061.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall on Falls road estate. Other side of this wall in Shankhill Road.  The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03040.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall on Falls road estate. Other side of this wall in Shankhill Road.  The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03054.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall on Falls road estate. Other side of this wall in Shankhill Road.  The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03038.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall on Falls road estate. Other side of this wall in Shankhill Road.  The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03037.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall on Falls road estate. Other side of this wall in Shankhill Road.  The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03027.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03015.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03008.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC03018.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02988.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02985.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02975.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02960.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. with progressive and revolutionary murals. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02967.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. Falls Road side. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02946.JPG
  • A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02937.JPG
  • Belfast Peace Wall. The peace lines or peace walls are a series of separation barriers in Northern Ireland that separate predominantly Republican and Nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from predominantly Loyalist and Unionist Protestant neighbourhoods. They have been built at urban interface areas in Belfast, Derry, Portadown and elsewhere. The stated purpose of the peace lines is to minimise inter-communal violence between Catholics of whom are nationalists who self-identify as Irish) and Protestants of whom are unionists who self-identify as British).
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02939.JPG
  • A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02930.JPG
  • A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02922.JPG
  • Taxi guided tours around Belfast murals. A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02887.JPG
  • Taxi guided tours around Belfast murals. A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02882.JPG
  • Taxi guided tours around Belfast murals. A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02885.JPG
  • Taxi guided tours around Belfast murals. A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02878.JPG
  • Shankhill loyalists. A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02864.JPG
  • Shankhill loyalists. A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02862.JPG
  • A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02853.JPG
  • A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02850.JPG
  • A staunch unionist area. Shankhill Road estate, Belfast. It is a staunch unionist area, fiercely pro-Britain. Their representatives, the Democratic Unionist Party, founded by Ian Paisley in 1971, are presently in parliament in collusion with the conservative party, looking for a hard Brexit with a border between Northern Ireland and the South. The ten DUP votes gives the conservative party its majority in government. This is nothing new. During the ‘Troubles’ three decades of bloodshed, with Catholic Irish Republican Nationalists seeking to unit Ireland, the pro-British Protestant loyalists wanted to remain part of the United Kingdom
    BREXIT_NORTHERN_IRELAND_DSC02843.JPG
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Nigel Dickinson

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