Belfast At three o’clock in the afternoon, a sudden traffic jam formed at Florbridge on the border. Two men in British customs uniforms carry a sign to the street and place it near a house made of brown wood. “British Customs – stop all vehicles, including cyclists,” it reads. The two of them kept themselves close to it, staring intently at the rolling cars.
While the northern border between the British and the Irish and protested in November, is intended to be part of the Republic of Ireland, the Irish Post to remind residents on the island. “In 1957, they closed the bridge here,” says Declan phiyarean sanghatakarilearalaya. “This is a perfect anasthayayirunnu residents. We are not allowed to have a border here again.
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