News from Sinn Fein.......for any Irish in particular interested.

Thanks.



    IRISH NEWS ROUND-UP
    http://irlnet.com/rmlist/

    Weekend, 10/11 April, 1999


1.  RUC ACCUSED OF COLLUSION BY UN; NELSON INVESTIGATION SLATED
2.  Parties & Prime Ministers to try again
3.  Man injured in loyalist bomb attack
4.  Feature: A year of living dangerously

_____________________________________________________________________


>>>>>> RUC ACCUSED OF COLLUSION BY UN; NELSON INVESTIGATION SLATED


 Calls for a totally independent investigation into the murder of
 human rights lawyer Rosemary Nelson continue as further RUC
 incompetence and disinterest in the case are exposed.

 At the same time, the British government and the RUC have been
 accused of collusion in the murder of another defence lawyer in a
 report compiled by the United Nations, to be presented tomorrow.

 Special rapporteur Param Cumaraswamy, who investigated claims of
 RUC-loyalist collusion and harassment of lawyers, demands that the
 government establishes an independent inquiry into the murder of
 Belfast lawyer Pat Finucane in 1990. In his report he says that the
 RUC also showed "complete indifference" to allegations of harassment
 and intimidation of defence lawyers.

 The report, which prominently features testimony by Rosemary Nelson,
 says revelations by investigative journalists of British Army & RUC
 collusion in murders "further substantiates" the conclusion "that
 there was possible security force collusion in the murder of Pat
 Finucane".

 RUC members are among the suspects in the murder of Mrs Nelson, who
 was killed on March 15 by a booby-trap bomb planted underneath her
 car as it was parked outside her offices.

 Promises by the force to carry out a full and rigorous investigation
 were unmasked as fanciful last week, when it was revealed that the
 wrong date and telephone number appeared on an appeal for information
 put out by the RUC.

 And contradictory statements issued by the RUC have heightened fears
 that the investigation is a sham.

 Drawing attention to the RUC's control of the investigation,  Bairbre
 de Brun said: "Assurances were given that an independent element was
 to be introduced in the form of David Phillips, chief constable of
 Kent, and FBI legal attache John Guldo.

 "When it became clear that neither of these men were actually here in
 the six counties, a further announcement was made by the RUC that the
 deputy chief constable of Norfolk was being brought in.

 "The excuse was given that David Phillips was unable to spend time
 here but that Colin Port can."

 The Sinn Fein assembly representative for West Belfast said this move
 raised a number of questions.

 Ms de Brun asked: "Why were we told previously that David Phillips's
 involvement would provide necessary outside oversight, if in fact he
 is unable to do so?

 "Why did David Phillips express satisfaction in the day-to-day
 handling of the investigation by the RUC if he hasn't got time to
 oversee how they carry out that work?

 "Who now controls, directs and commands the investigation?

 "What outside investigation, if any, is taking place?

 "Why are contradictory statements being issued on a regular basis by
 the RUC?"

 A blundering investigation mounted by the RUC has not inspired
 confidence that a real effort is being made to find the killers. A
 faxed appeal from the RUC seeking information on the movement of
 vehicles in the Lurgan area just prior to the Nelson killing, dated
 Sunday as "the 13th". The Sunday in question actually fell on March
 14.

 The astonishing error was further compounded as telephone callers
 rang the number supplied by the RUC murder inquiry team to alert them
 of the error, only to be told by a British Telecom answering service
 that the number had been discontinued.

 This latest example of careless errors follows hard on the heels of a
 damning report by the Independent Commission for Police Complaints
 (ICPC), recently leaked to the media. The report exposed members of
 the RUC tasked with investigating complaints made by Rosemary Nelson
 of harassment by the fiorce, including death threats before her
 murder, as deliberately obstructive and dismissive.

 The inability and unwillingness of the RUC to investigate Rosemary
 Nelson's complaints led the ICPC, which was acting in a supervisory
 role, to request that the RUC be pulled off the case. Metropolitan
 Police Chief Niall Mulvilhill, together with a team of his own
 officers, took over the investigation from the RUC.

 Describing how Rosemary Nelson travelled to the United States to give
 evidence to a congressional hearing on RUC death threats and
 intimidation of defence lawyers, Ms de Brun said:

 "There is no evidence now to suggest that the RUC will be any more
 vigorous in their investigation of Rosemary Nelson's murder, and of
 any link between her killing and threats made to life by RUC
 officers.

 "Suggestions that local officers are best placed to carry out a
 murder investigation may well be true in a country where the police
 force wants to vigorously investigate all aspects of the
 circumstances leading to the murder, but the RUC is not such a force.

 "The RUC show considerable hostility towards human rights solicitors
 and towards any investigation into the death threats made against
 her.

 "There is little chance of any real investigation into links between
 the murder of Rosemary Nelson and death threats made by RUC officers
 unless a fully independent inquiry is established," Ms de Brun said.


__________________________________________________________________________


>>>>>> Parties & Prime Ministers to try again


 Intense negotiations are set to take place in Belfast on Tuesday in
 another bid to salvage Irish peace efforts.

 The peace process has been in crisis following the failure to meet a
 third deadline for the formation of a power-sharing Executive before
 Easter.

 Unionists are refusing to agree to the formation of the Executive
 without the destruction or 'decommissioning' of IRA arms, demands
 which the IRA has repeatedly rejected.

 Discussions were adjourned on April 1 after three days and nights of
 talks failed to break the deadlock.  There is still no sign of a
 solution to the impasse which has blocked the implementation of last
 year's Good Friday Agreement, and if anything, positions appear to
 have hardened.

 In media briefings yesterday, the IRA criticised a document presented
 by the two governments before the adjournment of talks at
 Hillsborough Castle outside Belfast which sided with the demands of
 Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble. IRA sources said they were
 "unimpressed" by the draft declaration and saw it as "a failure by
 the British and Irish governments to confront the unionist veto". The
 IRA admitted the declaration had caused anger in republican circles.

 First Minister-designate Trimble has also rejected the proposed
 inclusion of decommissioning by the RUC police or British army as
 part of the Hillsborough Declaration's "collective act of
 reconciliation".

 "There is absolutely no equivalent between arms held by the army and
 police and those held by illegal organisations", he declared.

 Last week Sinn Fein expressed its own frustration and disappointment
 at the declaration, which they see as an attempt to renegotiate the
 Good Friday Agreement -- something they have explicity ruled out. And
 on Friday, loyalist paramilitaries further complicated the issue when
 they indicated they would not be decommissioning their weapons.

 VIOLENCE AND INTIMIDATION

 As the talks process stalled, loyalist violence escalated in the past
 two weeks, with Catholic homes and pubs subjected to random arson and
 bomb attacks. These are expected to reach a maximum this summer as
 the Orange marching season leads to stand-offs in nationalist areas,
 with Catholic residents objecting to the routing of the annual
 celebrations of Protestant battle victories through their
 communities.

 On Saturday, a loyalist mob again returned once again to the Catholic
 Church of Our Lady in largely Protestant Harryville to intimidate
 parishioners attending six o'clock mass. The loyalists said they were
 doing so because Protestant Orangemen in Portadown are being
 prevented from marching down the nationalist Garvaghy Road. A
 spokesman for the group said if the Orange Order could not parade
 through republican or nationalist areas, then Catholics could not
 come into their area on Saturdays to worship.

 Loyalists are said to be planning to mount a similar protest on the
 Catholic church in the Garvaghy Road enclave within the next week.

 "Basically, if this is the case, then the government must step in,"
 said residents' spokesman Breandan Mac Cionnaith. He said Portadown
 was in an extremely volatile state at present following the murder of
 human rights lawyer Rosemary Nelson. "If firm action is not taken
 soon, then there could be further serious violence and even loss of
 life."

 Also looming on the calendar is the June 10 European election, which
 will accentuate differences between the parties and provide a focus
 for discontent on both sides. With time becoming increasingly
 critical, the Irish Taoiseach Bertie Ahern and British Prime Minister
 Tony Blair are set to return to Belfast on Thursday for another
 high-profile attempt to restore the situation.

 'GREATEST CRISIS'

 Sinn Fein's chief Martin McGuinness, said the peace process was
 facing "maybe its greatest crisis" but nevertheless insisted that his
 party was committed to overcoming the deadlock.

 He warned that Sinn Fein, which had convinced many sceptical
 republicans to sign up to the Good Friday Agreement, could not
 deliver support for what amounted to a renegotiation of that deal. It
 was an "unacceptable" attempt to link IRA decommissioning to the
 party's right to take its seats in the new administration, he said.

 Accusing the British government of also taking a "drip, drip"
 approach to the dismantling of its massive military presence in the
 north of Ireland, he nevertheless insisted that his party would not
 be discouraged.

 "The mood music out there is very, very bad at the moment. But, that
 said, I am not disheartened, I am not despondent. There is still a
 tremendous amount of hope about - a tremendous amount of optimism
 that all of this can work. What we have to do is get back in there
 next Tuesday and try and resolve it.

 "There is no difficulty in relation to communications between
 ourselves and the governments. We are not going to run off like
 spoilt boys with our thumbs in our mouths. What we are going to do is
 buckle down to the task ahead of us. We are going to work with people
 in a very determined way to overcome the difficulties."

 British political development minister Paul Murphy meanwhile claimed
 the Hillsborough document presented "a defined way forward that
 points the way to the final resolution" to the impasse.

 Writing in the Sunday People, Mr Murphy denied claims that the two
 governments were trying to force an IRA surrender.

 "It is important to recall what the process is not. It is not asking
 anyone to surrender. Neither is it demanding that either tradition
 give up its aspirations or deny their legitimate concerns.

 "Instead it attempts to find a balanced way through the conflicting
 demands of either side."

 Mr Murphy also suggested the parties should submit their own plan for
 resolving the decommissioning dispute during the forthcoming round of
 negotiations.


__________________________________________________________________________


>>>>>> Man injured in loyalist bomb attack


 A man in his thirties was injured in a loyalist bomb attack on a bar
 and steak-house in County Antrim last night. It was the latest random
 sectarian attack by the Orange Volunteers, a dissident loyalist
 death-squad.

 The explosion occurred shortly after 10 p.m. at the Barleycorn
 steak-house in Muckamore, near Antrim town.

 One man, as yet unnamed,  was injured in the explosion. He sustained
 leg and chest wounds and was removed by ambulance to Antrim Area
 Hospital, where his condition was described later as "satisfactory".

 The injured man was leaving the premises when the device exploded
 outside the fornt door of the establishment. Staff and customers at
 the country pub were shocked by the attack. Local people said that
 the only motive for the bomb attack could be sectarian.

 The Orange Volunteers carried out similar attacks in County Antrim in
 recent weeks. In February, the paramilitary group claimed
 responsibility for a bomb attack on the Whitehorse Inn outside
 Crumlin. Three weeks ago, the group carried out another such attack
 on the Derryhirk Inn in Aughagallon.


__________________________________________________________________________


>>>>>> Feature: A year of living dangerously


 --------------------------------------------------------------------
 If the superlatives of those in the media are anything to go by, the
 signing of the Good Friday Agreement on 10 April 1998 was the
 defining event for the Irish people since the Easter Rising. It was
 the means to a common end - the creation of a lasting peace in
 Ireland.

 As the days sped by, however, the interpretations and understandings
 of what was actually agreed on Good Friday multiplied. The
 differences became clearer and the good faith shown by nationalists
 in Stormont buildings during Easter week evaporated, leaving us at 10
 April 1999 with a still barely started canvas.

 What has been filled in over the last year is a mixture of good and
 bad. Good in that the resolve and intent of Sinn Fein is still as
 clear and undiluted as it was a year ago. On the negative side, the
 last 12 months have seen the Ulster Unionists' ongoing attempts to
 undermine, redefine, and renegotiate the Good Friday Agreement.

 Here,  Neil Forde picks out some of the crucial events of the 12
 months since 10 April 1998.
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------


 April 1998

 18 April: Speaking at the Sinn Fein ard fheis, Gerry Adams told the
 delegates that we do not have have a level playing field as a result
 of these negotiations. What we do have, said Adams is "a very visible
 playing field, with the equality issue up in lights, the clear
 prospect of change if we have the strength and commitment to hold
 people to positions outlined and no hiding place for supremacists".

 29 April: The IRA, responding to the Good Friday Agreement, said in a
 statement that the document "clearly fails short of presenting a
 solid basis for a lasting settlement... but it does mark a
 significant development". The statement also said that "whether or
 not the the Good Friday Agreement "heralds a transformation of the
 situation is dependent totally on the will of the British
 government".

 May

 10 May: Sinn Fein delegates voted by an overwhelming majority to
 endorse the Good Friday Agreement. The party's constitution was
 changed to allow party members participate in the proposed new
 assembly.

 15 May: UUP MP Jeffrey Donaldson committed himself to a No vote in
 the referendum on the Good Friday Agreement.

 22 May: Two-and-a-half-million people voted throughout Ireland in the
 22 May referenda. In the Six Counties, 71.12% of the voters, 676,966
 people, were in favour of the Agreement. In the 26 Counties, 94.4% of
 voters, 1,442,583 people, were in favour of the agreement.

 24 May: Bertie Ahern was quoted in the Sunday Business Post: "If we
 get into the business of expecting the IRA to drive a truck up and
 start offloading guns to the RUC or the British army, then we're
 going to be waiting for the truck."

 24 May: Gardai intercepted a 940lb bomb at Carrickaneena, county
 Louth

 25 May: The loyalist pickets at Harryville Catholic Church in
 Ballymena ended. Loyalists had begun picketing Masses in September
 1996 in protest at Orange marches being prevented passing through
 Dunloy.

 26 May: Ulster Unionist MP and opponent of the Agreement Jeffrey
 Donaldson was prevented by his party from standing as a candidate in
 the Assembly elections.

 28 May: Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams, speaking about
 decommissioning to the American-Irish Historical Society, said: "It
 is frankly worrying that since the document was signed, there are
 already signs that the British government is buckling under unionist
 pressure to depart from what was agreed at Stormont."

 30 May: Unanimous opposition from the Ulster GAA delegates at its
 annual conference prevented the repeal of Rule 21, which bars members
 of the British Army or the RUC from becoming GAA members. The GAA
 Central Council deferred a resolution on ending the ban.

 30 May: The RUC fired plastic bullets at nationalists protesting at a
 Junior Orange Lodge March in Portadown which entered the lower
 Garvaghy Road.

 31 May: Sinn Fein MPs turned down an invitation to a garden party
 where Charles Windsor was to be the guest of honour.

 June

 3 June: Bertie Ahern admitted he was disappointed that the British
 government had only confirmed one of the 10 candidates nominated by
 the Dublin government for membership of the Independent Commission on
 Policing in Northern Ireland. The 10th candidate was picked after the
 British government vetoed the first nine.

 3 June: David Trimble, speaking at a UUP press conference, said that
 the Drumcree parade should be allowed go ahead and that Gerry Adams
 could ease tension by "calling his dogs off".

 8 June: A memo leaked from the Northern Ireland Office showed the
 split between the Dublin and London governments over the composition
 of the policing commission. It also showed the attempts made by Mo
 Mowlam to stifle Sinn Fein criticism of the appointments.

 10 June: The Ulster Unionists together with the Conservatives sought
 to amend the Labour government's Northern Ireland Sentences Bill with
 a requirement for decommissioning at the same time.

 19 June: 1,500 Orange Order members and more than 20 marching bands
 participated in the 'Tour of the North' parade.

 20 June: The Irish Times disclosed that Tony Blair asked Sinn Fein
 President Gerry Adams to support proposals to let a limited number of
 marchers playing 'non-contentious' tunes walk the Garvaghy Road.

 24 June: A 200lb bomb exploded in Newtownhamilton, two days before
 polling.

 26 June: Sinn Fein won 18 seats in the Assembly election, making it
 the fourth largest party in the Six Counties as well as having the
 largest gain in vote share of any party since the 1997 Westminster
 elections.

 27 June: RUC batoned nationalists in West Belfast protesting against
 an Orange Order march which was allowed onto the Springfield Road.

 29 June: The Parades Commission barred the Drumcree Orange marchers
 from walking the Garvaghy Road on 5 July.

 30 June: John Alderice resigned as leader of the Alliance Party to
 take up the post as position of temporary speaker to the New
 Assembly. None of his party colleagues knew of his intention to
 resign.



 July

 1 July: The newly elected Assembly met for the first time. David
 Trimble was elected First Minister. Seamus Mallon took the Deputy
 First Minister's post. Gerry Adams was heckled by unionist assembly
 members when he spoke in Irish. He told the Assembly: "It is only by
 meeting like this that we can will work out a shared future for all
 the people of this island."

 5 July: The Drumcree marchers were blocked by the RUC and British
 army from walking the Garvaghy Road. The marchers refused to move and
 a 12-day standoff began. During the 12 days, Drumcree was the scene
 of nightly violence as the RUC and British army come under attack
 from the marchers and their supporters.

 8 July: RUC figures showed that between 4 and 8 July there were 437
 attacks on the security forces, 12 shooting incidents, 25 blast
 bombs, 412 petrol bombings, 136 vehicles hijacked, 73 houses and 93
 other buildings damaged.

 10 July: Four men and two women were arrested in London. The
 Metropolitan Police claimed that they were within minutes of
 attempting to plant bombs.

 12 July: Richard (age 10), Mark (9) and Jason (7) Quinn are burned to
 death when their Ballymoney home is targeted by loyalists in a
 sectarian arson attack.

 16 July: 400 British troops from the 1st Battalion of the Kings
 Regiment, deployed in Belfast during the Drumcree standoff, returned
 to Britain.

 17 July: Harold Gracey, Portadown Orange Order District Master
 ordered an end to mass demonstrations at Drumcree after 12 days of
 loyalist violence. He said: "We don't need 30,000 people on that hill
 as long as there are a few people there."

 18 July: Sean O'Callaghan meets senior aides of Tony Blair in 10
 Downing Street to help write a speech for the prime minister.

 20 July. Garvaghy Road residents are told they could 'win' a package
 of economic investment in return for movement on the parade issue
 during proximity talks with the Orange Order.

 20 July. Speaking in Westminster as the Commons voted on legislation
 to bring the Assembly and other elements of the Good Friday Agreement
 into force, David Trimble said: "I have no confidence in the
 commitment of Sinn Fein to nonviolence and exclusively peaceful
 means." Trimble said he would seek to have Sinn Fein excluded from
 office.

 23 July: The Housing Executive in Northern Ireland had still not
 found homes for 141 Catholic families and the families of 50 RUC
 officers burned out of their houses during the Drumcree standoff.

 24 July: The RUC claimed that they "are pursuing a line of enquiry
 that suggests" the IRA carried out the murder of Andrew Kearney a
 week beforehand.

 26 July: Orange Order Grand Master Robert Saulter announced that he
 was prepared to met the Garvaghy road residents in an attempt to
 resolve the Drumcree impasse.

 28 July: In an embarrassing u-turn, Saulters said that he could only
 have face-to-face talks with "groups manipulated by Sinn Fein/IRA...
 when it is finally determined that Sinn Fein/IRA declare their
 terrorist campaign is over for good".



 August

 1 August: A car bomb exploded in the centre of Banbridge, County
 Down.

 3 August: Nationalist residents and the Apprentice Boys in Derry
 agreed a compromise for their annual march along the city walls.

 14 August: 418 prisoners applied for early release from the Sentence
 Review Commission. Bertie Ahern speaking in Limerick said that anyone
 convicted of involvement in the murder of Garda Jerry McCabe would
 not qualify for early release under the terms of the Good Friday
 Agreement.

 15 August: 28 people were killed and more than 200 were injured when
 a bomb exploded in Omagh. Sinn Fein MP and chief negotiator Martin
 McGuinness described the bomb as "an indefensible action" and "an
 appalling act". Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams said: "I condemn it
 without any equivocation whatsoever."

 19 August: Bertie Ahern announced a new range of security measures,
 including the withdrawal of a suspect's right to silence, directing
 an unlawful organisation, withholding information concerning
 terrorist offence, unlawfully collecting information and training
 persons in the use of firearms or explosives. Sinn Fein TD Caoimghin
 O Caolain said that  the limiting of civil liberties in the proposals
 would "simply sow the seeds of future injustice".

 22 August: The INLA declared a ceasefire

 25 August: Tony Blair introduced his own range of new security
 measures in the wake of the Omagh bomb. He described them as being of
 a "draconian and fundamental nature".



 September

 1 September: Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams stated that Sinn Fein
 wanted violence to be "done with and gone... a thing of the past".

 2 September: Mo Mowlam released the two Scots Guardsmen convicted of
 murdering Peter McBride in 1992. Sinn Fein's chief negotiator, Martin
 McGuinness, was appointed as the party's representative to deal with
 the International Body on Decommissioning.

 3 September: US president Bill Clinton visited Omagh as part of his
 trip to Ireland.

 5 September: The 29th person died from injuries received in the Omagh
 bomb.

 7 September: The group responsible for the Omagh bombing declared a
 complete cessation of its bombing campaign.

 10 September: Gerry Adams and David Trimble met for 35 minutes. It
 was the first such meeting between a republican and a unionist leader
 since James Craig met Michael Collins in 1922. Afterwards, Gerry
 Adams said: "This is not about me or David Trimble. It is about our
 children and it's about our future."

 RUC chief constable Ronnie Flanagan announced the end of British army
 patrols in Belfast

 11 September: The first prisoners were released in the Six Counties
 as part of the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.

 14 September: The Six-County Assembly met for its first formal
 session.

 24 September: Deputy First Minister Seamus Mallon announced that he
 would not participate in the inaugral meeting of the North-South
 council until a shadow executive was formed in the Six Counties.



 October

 1 October: A 75-minute meeting was held between Gerry Adams and David
 Trimble. Afterwards, Trimble said that if decommssioning took place
 there could be progress on other matters.

 31 October: Stalling by the Ulster Unionists meant that the deadline
 for the formation of the North/South bodies was missed.



 November

 2 November: Bertie Ahern held a series of meetings in Stormont to
 "kick-start" the implementation process of the Good Friday Agreement.

 8 November: A Sunday newspaper disclosed that the Independent
 Commission on Policing was seeking access to the files on the
 Stalker-Sampson report into RUC shoot-to-kill actions.

 10 November: Martin McGuinness spoke on BBC radio about why the IRA
 would not decommission. He said: "The IRA won't do it. That's the
 reason."

 13 November: Peter Sherry, the first POW repatriated from a British
 jail to Ireland is released from Portlaoise prison. Four hundred
 British soldiers are withdrawn from the Six Counties leaving the
 lowest level of troops since the 1970s. A number of checkpoints in
 Bessbrook and South Armagh were also to be closed.

 17 November: Early drafts of the report from Independent Commission
 of Policing were leaked to the media, advocating the disbandment of
 the RUC.

 19 November: A report from the UN Committee Against Torture called
 for reform of the RUC so that it represented the cultural realities
 in the Six Counties. They also called for the closure of detention
 centres, particularly Castlereagh, and the banning of plastic
 bullets.

 22 November: A Dublin newspaper journalist reported a senior NIO
 official as saying: "Trimble needs something from the Provos. It has
 to be some indication that decommissioning will be dealt with."

 RUC officers fired shots at local residents in Silverbridge, South
 Armagh.

 26 November: Tony Blair visited Dublin and was the first British
 Prime Minister to address a joint meeting of the Leinster House
 summit and parliament. Blair said: "We have come too far to go back
 now."

 30 November: Sinn Fein's submission to the Independent Policing
 Commission called for the disbandment of the RUC and a reduction in
 the number of police officers in any new force. It advocated a
 screening process for new applicants. Membership of the force should
 be 45% Catholic, 15% Gay or Lesbian, and 2% ethnic minorities.



 December

 2 December: The Six-County Police Authority, in a submission to the
 Patten Commission on policing, said that they would "vigorously
 oppose" any plan to disband the RUC. They claimed that "there could
 be no alternative to the RUC as the police service for Northern
 Ireland".

 3 December: Unionists and nationalists fell into dispute during
 negotiations on the format of the Assembly's governmental structures
 and all-Ireland bodies. Seamus Mallon believed he had reached an
 agreement with Tony Blair on All-Ireland implementation bodies and
 the number of government departments. The Ulster Unionists u-turned
 after endorsing the agreement.

 10 December: David Trimble and John Hume accepted the Nobel Peace
 Prize. David Trimble equated republicanism with fascism in his
 acceptance speech.

 13 December: David Trimble, speaking in Sweden, asserted that the
 decommissioning of IRA weapons by the IRA and others would have to be
 carried out in front of TV cameras so that ordinary people could
 believe it had taken place.

 18 December: The UUP and the SDLP agreed a joint pact on setting up
 government departments and North-South bodies.



 January

 6 January: The IRA's New Year statement queried whether the British
 government would "succumb to the unionist veto". The statement said:
 "Those same unionist politicians who signed up for the Good Friday
 document in April last have expended all their energy since in a
 gradual intensification of their attempts to obstruct its
 implementation and negate its potential."

 13 January: Mo Mowlam published the British government's legislative
 programme to start devolution of powers to the Assembly by 10 March.
 Mowlam repeated her view that the finish line was now in sight.

 15 January: A compromise was finally reached between David Trimble
 and Seamus Mallon on a timetable for setting up the institutions
 promised under the Good Friday Agreement.



 February

 5 February: Sinn Fein's chief negotiator, Martin McGuinness, told the
 Guardian that "I cannot get the IRA to hand in guns, I cannot get the
 IRA to surrender."

 7 February: Dublin government Tanaiste Mary Harney, in a rare public
 statement on the peace process, said: "There will have to be a
 gesture on decommissioning definitely -- a substantial gesture."



 March

 8 March: The Dublin and London governments signed an international
 agreement providing for the establishment of the North-South
 ministerial council and implementation bodies as well as the British
 Irish Council and the British Irish Intergovernmental Conference.

 15 March: Human rights solicitor Rosemary Nelson was murdered in a
 car bomb attack. Nelson was the legal representative of nationalists
 throughout Portadown. She had been the victim of systematic and
 orchestrated threats from loyalist paramilitaries and RUC officers.

 17 March: Gerry Adams and David Trimble met for 30 minutes in the
 White House. Afterwards, Adams said the meeting was "cordial" but
 Trimble showed no evidence of changing his position on "making
 demands on me which I cannot deliver".

 18 March: Bill Clinton, Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern issued a joint
 statement. They said: "The agreement endorsed by the people last May
 must be implemented in all its aspects."

 29 March: Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern travelled to Hillsborough
 Castle to attend the ongoing negotiations on implementing the Good
 Friday Agreement. On the same day, Dublin government justice minister
 John O'Donoghue ruled out holding an independent inquiry into the
 1974 Dublin-Monaghan bombings.

 31 March: An IRA statement said that the organisation had "waited
 patiently for evidence" that the Good Friday Agreement would "deliver
 tangible progress". The statement also said: "The IRA wants to see a
 permanent peace in this country."



 April 1999

 1 April: Bertie Ahern and Tony Blair agreed a new declaration which
 proposed that on a date to be set, nominations would be made for
 ministers of the shadow executive using the d'Hondt procedure. Not
 more than one month later, a collective act of reconciliation would
 take place. Some arms woukd have to be voluntarily decommissioned on
 this day. At the same time the North-South Ministerial Council, the
 North-South Implementation Bodies, The British Irish Council and the
 British Irish Intergovernmental Conference would be established.







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