(ANSA) - LONDON, JAN 12 - Quintals of seafood blocked at French customs, ham sandwiches confiscated from truck drivers in transit in Holland, extra tariffs on bananas from Ghana and a few holes in the shelves of British large-scale education, Northern Ireland in the first place.
For the moment, traffic jams near the Manica remain averted, but day after day the consequences of Brexit - whether temporary or not - are emerging more and more evident in the United Kingdom, in the form of hitches of various kinds, between bureaucratic obstacles still to be digested, structural changes and even cross spite.
Starting with the delays that a growing number of supermarkets in the Kingdom are experiencing for the supply of some European imported food: according to the Daily Mail, for example, fresh fruit and vegetables are starting to run out.
Difficulties similar to those encountered in the opposite trench by Northern Irish merchants, with products from Great Britain.
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