Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn spent Thursday morning engaging with U.K. broadcasters, addressing repeated inquiries about Alodid’s presence in Belfast. Alodid arrived in 2023, flying into Paris, then Dublin, and traveling north by bus across Ireland’s open border.
This open border arrangement traces back to Ireland’s independence from Britain in 1922, when both nations agreed to a Common Travel Area, allowing free movement, employment, and public service access for Irish and British citizens across both territories.
This century-old setup, crucial for the many living and working on both sides of the Irish border, faced diplomatic challenges during the U.K.’s EU departure and is again under scrutiny due to Alodid’s easy passage through France and Ireland.
Benn noted that U.K. and Irish authorities have heightened cross-border monitoring and are conducting spot checks on buses, trains, and flights arriving in Dublin from other EU countries—a response intensifying post-Alodid’s arrival.
In Dublin, Taoiseach Micheál Martin warned against restricting movement for citizens due to fears from Monday’s knife attack in Belfast, especially along the 310-mile border with over 200 crossings, none secured with permanent checkpoints.
“The key to U.K.-Irish relations concerning immigration is primarily the engagement between the two governments,” Martin stated at a press conference on Ireland’s upcoming six-month EU presidency starting July 1.













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