What's your thoughts on the proposed ending of the Common Travel Area between Ireland and Britain next year by the British government? Discuss. I mentioned it to a mate here in Liverpool last night and he never heard a thing about it.
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What's your thoughts on the proposed ending of the Common Travel Area between Ireland and Britain next year by the British government? Discuss. I mentioned it to a mate here in Liverpool last night and he never heard a thing about it.
I thought the reason Ireland was staying out of the widened Schengen Area was because the British don't want in and therefore the CTA has to be maintained?
I don't understand how the CTA can be ended without a border being re-established between the North and South? How ironic that that would happen now, given the current political climate.
Found this posted on Wikipedia.Quote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia
I dont see the problem if im travelling to the UK i bring my passport anyway .
The most sensible option would be to agree common standards and implement them where ID checks are already required, ie for crossing the Irish sea by air or boat, whether it be from Northern or Republic of Ireland. Unfortunately due to the perceived "united Ireland" vibes this gives off this is unacceptable to many northern Unionists.
Yet again, its case of principal over substance.
Its unenforceable given how easy it is to travel up north with the motorway and all that. I mean I shop in Sainsbury's in Newry once a month.
I'm not too sure of the differences between the CTA and the Schengen Agreement but I know that I've crossed borders on mainland Europe without being stopped for ID. I went from Germany to France along the motorway and we weren't stopped. I went from Germany to Austria on a train and again we weren't asked for passports, so why isn't this adopted for travelling to the UK?
If you fly or sail to any country you need a passport anyway, so it wouldn't be hard to bring your passport to the UK everytime you go.
This is where it gets somewhat complicated.
Schengen is effectively a CTA for mainland Europe and the EEA. But many of these nations require you to carry official national ID cards at all times anyway regardless of where you are, so it isn't true to say you don't need to carry ID.
As Block G Raptor says, it is, in practice, the same here. You are not checked on the land border between UK (N.I.) and Ireland. Airports and ferries require you to have ID for their own security reasons (nothing to do with the CTA, you need to carry this on a flight between Manchester and London for example), but, and I stand to be corrected, if you sailed your own yacht between Ireland and Britain, you wouldn't need to carry ID (yachting ID maybe?).
Like I said, from my own experiences I've never been stopped for ID crossing borders on land in Europe, this includes driving from Germany into France and back again without being stopped for ID.
That is the main hypothetical problem for people on this island, yet it doesn't appear to be a problem on the mainland.
So why isn't the Schengen Agreement put into effect here if it's just a small matter of carrying your ID with you even though you mightn't be asked to show it?
Some people don't see carrying id with you as a small matter, I guess.
Strictly speaking I don't /think/ so, but these days you're more likely to be asked to show id, and the boat's paperwork.Quote:
if you sailed your own yacht between Ireland and Britain, you wouldn't need to carry ID (yachting ID maybe?).
Because the Brits don't trust them Yuropeuns (innit) and the flipside of having no borders inside Schengen countries is that you are required to have very strict controls around the Schengen area perimeter. Were Ireland to go in without the UK the border between North and South would have to be re-established.
Well tbh I can see why they want to tighten up arrangements.
At the moment its a farce, you can travel between Ireland and Wales by plane using a student card with a blurry picture under a different name to that which you booked the flight under. Done it too many times!
Last night I landed in Bristol off a Ryanair flight, I was first off the plane. Handling staff ask me where have we come from? Germany (Ryanair dont fly to Germany from Bristol, Easyjet do!)? I say no Ireland and with that he guides use through the "domestic" path where there are no passports/ids required. High security indeed