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WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : Ireland

As negotiations for new Northern Ireland Assembly break down

Violence erupts again in Drumcree

By Richard Tyler
9 December 1998

Mutual recriminations have accompanied the breakdown of the present
negotiations to set up the new Northern Ireland Assembly and joint
cross-border bodies with the Irish Republic.

At its only meeting so far, the Assembly met on July 1 to appoint Ulster
Unionist Party leader David Trimble as First Minister, with Seamus Mallon
from the Social Democratic and Labour Party as his deputy. The Assembly
then adjourned for negotiations between the UUP, SDLP and Sinn Fein to
discuss the setting up of an executive and to reach agreement on the
composition of various cross-border bodies.

However, these talks have proved so difficult that the February deadline
for the start of the Assembly is in danger. In an effort to break the
impasse, British Prime Minister Tony Blair cancelled all his other
engagements last Wednesday and flew to Belfast to hold talks with the party
leaders. Following seven hours of late-night discussions the press was
reporting that "significant progress" had been made. But then on Friday,
after Blair had returned to England, Trimble claimed the nationalists had
made "unreasonable demands", pointing the finger at the SDLP. "We thought
we had broken the back of it--and then we were to sort out the details--and
found fresh obstacles being created," he said.

For the SDLP, Seamus Mallon said, "People did not honour their word. That's
putting it as mildly as I possibly can."

He continued, "Apart from myself, there is a very substantial anger among
the other political parties at the way in which the Ulster Unionist Party
seems to have walked away from an arrangement it had made.... I can see it
even already beginning to erode the credibility that the peace process in
the Assembly has had within the community."

Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams said: "There was a deal done this week and it
was undone by Unionist bad faith."

The talks are now on hold as the leaders of the main nationalist and
Unionist parties in Northern Ireland flew off to America last Friday to
receive various awards. They are en route to Oslo to receive their Nobel
Peace Prize. David Trimble and SDLP leader John Hume were nominated for the
award for their part in brokering the Northern Ireland Agreement.

Two issues have lead to the current crisis in negotiations. According to
the Financial Times, "The real crunch was over the SDLP's insistence on
including a body for foreign investment promotion, after the UUP had
expressly opposed the idea during the multi-party talks.... Trimble argued
it would imply a single exchequer, a single fiscal system and one granting
body, 'It's a matter of amazement that nationalists want all the economic
functions to be extracted from the assembly before it's even started,' he
said."

The Sunday Observer claimed that a meeting of the Ulster Unionist Assembly
members "went almost ballistic" following Trimble's report back from the
talks with Blair. "The main sticking point was the SDLP wish for a body to
govern inward investment into the whole of Ireland, treating the island as
an economic unit."

The paper wrote, "Trimble will be ousted by his backbenchers in the
Northern Ireland Assembly unless he can scrap plans for a cross-border body
on trade. The hard-liners were poised to bring down the Assembly if Sinn
Fein is admitted to the executive without the IRA decommissioning weapons."

This is the second issue. Unionists insist that there can be no place for
Sinn Fein on the executive before the IRA begins to hand over its weapons.
Pauline Armitage, a UUP Assembly member for East Londonderry, told the
press, "I want decommissioning and I want a resolution to the Drumcree
problem.... I would prefer to see the whole package together, and I would
prefer not to have any bodies set up because the pressure should remain on
decommissioning."

This latest impasse once more highlights the deep divisions that exist in
the Unionist camp. Trimble's nominally pro-Agreement UUP won 28 seats in
the Assembly and the Progressive Unionist Party of David Irvine have 2,
making 30 in total. Unionist parties opposed to the Agreement, including
Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionists, command 28 seats.

In November the anti-Agreement pressure group "Union First" held their
first public meeting in Belfast. In attendance were Martin Smyth and Willie
Ross, UUP Members of Parliament. Jeffrey Donaldson, the most vocal UUP MP
opposing the Agreement, and former Unionist leader Lord Molyneaux sent
their apologies. Other opponents of the Agreement in attendance were Ian
Paisley and UK Unionist Party leader Bob McCartney.

The loss of just two assemblymen from the pro-Agreement side would
jeopardise not only Trimble's position, but the Assembly itself. The
establishment of a cross-border body to co-ordinate bids for inward
investment with the Republic is at the heart of the new structures planned
for the island. The Irish Republic has become a prime investment location
for transnational corporations seeking access to the European market. It
has done so by offering tax breaks to business and striking wage-restraint
deals with the unions at the expense of Irish workers. The Northern Ireland
Agreement--drawn up by the British and American governments--is aimed at
eliminating all barriers to the exploitation of the whole of Ireland by
international capital and ensuring that the North emulates the Republic's
"success".

In this process, sections of indigenous capital, small businessmen and
farmers in the North, who provide the main clientele for Paisley and the
Orange Order, will undoubtedly loose out.

Growing tensions within the Unionist organisations were also indicated by
the outbreak of violence last Thursday evening over loyalist parades in
Drumcree. One thousand people demonstrated in support of Orange marches
down the mainly Catholic Garvaghy Road. Ten police officers and four
protesters were injured as the police were attacked with fireworks and
other missiles. A loyalist mob attacked a garage and damaged cars,
attempting to hijack a lorry. Police responded by firing plastic bullets.
Ronnie Flanagan, Royal Ulster Constabulary Chief Officer, said, "People
arrived with fireworks in their back pockets, with iron bars, with cudgels,
with staves, with bricks and bottles".

An Orange Order spokesman said, "The situation can simply be resolved by
the parade being able to get down the Garvaghy Road. If we don't walk it
before Christmas we will walk it twice next year."

Another Orange Order member in Portadown told the press, "The young men
want to fight. The senior people do not want violence and neither does the
Orange Order, but we are afraid the young ones may take up arms and it
takes a lot of talking to keep them from it."

The Drumcree protest has been going on for 153 days, since Orangemen were
prevented from marching down the Garvaghy Road. At that time, Harold
Gracey, leader of the Drumcree protesters, said that they wanted to bring
down the Agreement. The organisers are threatening to hold a major
demonstration on December 19.

In another incident, shots were fired in Portadown on Saturday morning.
Later that day, a senior Loyalist was arrested.

See Also:
Commentary on the Northern Ireland Agreement
Using and abusing emergency power legislation with the blessing of Sinn
Fin/IRA
[23 September 1998]
The Omagh bombing and the dead-end of nationalism
[15 August 1998]
On the historical and social roots of Orangeism
[14 July 1998]



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