AFP, Dover :
Lorries trundle past a mural depicting a man chipping away at an EU flag in the British port town of Dover, where most residents are determined to see Brexit through despite the economic risks.
With one year to go until Britain’s planned exit on March 29, 2019, there are fears in this gateway to Europe of long tailbacks because of additional customs red tape.
But the mood is mostly defiant in Dover, where 62 percent voted in favour of leaving the European Union in a 2016 referendum-far higher than the national tally of 52 percent.
“It was the right decision to vote to get out,” Sofia Cairns, who moved to Britain from Poland 37 years ago, told AFP in one of the southeastern English town’s squares.
“God established these borders for each country and that’s how it should stay,” she said.
Outside his home, another Brexit supporter, Michael O’Leary, said he was confident that any disruption to the trade traffic that is the town’s lifeblood would be only temporary.
“I think it’s going to gridlock for a while, but all these things are solved,” he said.
“I think in the long run, 50 years down the line… I think that it will have all been solved, and all problems are political,” said O’Leary, voicing hope for increased trade with non-EU British allies such as Australia and New Zealand.
Britain has said it wants to pull out of the European single market and customs union, putting an end to the free movement of EU nationals into the UK.
According to government estimates published earlier this month, the British economy will be worse off under the three most plausible scenarios for its departure from the European Union.
Lorries trundle past a mural depicting a man chipping away at an EU flag in the British port town of Dover, where most residents are determined to see Brexit through despite the economic risks.
With one year to go until Britain’s planned exit on March 29, 2019, there are fears in this gateway to Europe of long tailbacks because of additional customs red tape.
But the mood is mostly defiant in Dover, where 62 percent voted in favour of leaving the European Union in a 2016 referendum-far higher than the national tally of 52 percent.
“It was the right decision to vote to get out,” Sofia Cairns, who moved to Britain from Poland 37 years ago, told AFP in one of the southeastern English town’s squares.
“God established these borders for each country and that’s how it should stay,” she said.
Outside his home, another Brexit supporter, Michael O’Leary, said he was confident that any disruption to the trade traffic that is the town’s lifeblood would be only temporary.
“I think it’s going to gridlock for a while, but all these things are solved,” he said.
“I think in the long run, 50 years down the line… I think that it will have all been solved, and all problems are political,” said O’Leary, voicing hope for increased trade with non-EU British allies such as Australia and New Zealand.
Britain has said it wants to pull out of the European single market and customs union, putting an end to the free movement of EU nationals into the UK.
According to government estimates published earlier this month, the British economy will be worse off under the three most plausible scenarios for its departure from the European Union.