"And there will never, ever, be IRA decommissioning, an IRA surrender."

WONDERFUL WORLD. BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE

11th June '01

By Danny Morrison (Andersonstown News 11/06/01)

Whilst I was more than pleased with Sinn Fein's increased vote in all the
constituencies, and with Pat Doherty's stupendous victory in West Tyrone, it
was the final result in Fermanagh and South Tyrone at twenty past ten on
Friday night that moved me the most and made me feel immensely proud to be
an Irish republican and part of a brilliant community.

On this, the twentieth anniversary of the hunger strike, it was like a
rendezvous with history. I had heard Michelle Gildernew at the re- launch of
Bobby Sands' 'One Day In My Life' in April speak about being eleven years
old in 1981 when Bobby died and being astonished and humbled at his and the
other hunger strikers' sacrifice. You could hear the raw emotion in her
voice, a memory come alive as she relived those heart-breaking days.

Eleven years of age!

And now, with 17,700 votes, she is the first woman republican abstentionist
MP since the election of Countess Markievicz with 7,835 votes in December
1918. When you hear the words 'Fermanagh and South Tyrone' you always think
of Bobby Sands and 1981 long before you think of Churchill's 'dreary
spires'. 1981 changed our lives and those of our young and I predict that
the rally in Belfast this August to commemorate the memory of those ten dead
men and their comrades Michael Gaughan and Frank Stagg will see the biggest
turn-out of republicans in a hundred years.

What are we to make of the highest ever republican electoral performance
since the foundation of this state, Sinn Fein's outpolling of constitutional
nationalists, its effect on the peace process, and the drive for Irish
independence?

Firstly, at a national level Sinn Fein has proved to be spot on. In the
Twenty-Six Counties it was castigated by that coalition government luminary,
Tanaiste Mary Harney of the 'Regressive' Democrats, not solely for being
inextricably linked to you-know-who, but for having crazy world politics!
Yet, Sinn Fein and the Green Party won the referendum opposing the Nice
Treaty, and demonstrably refuted - in the words of John Hume and Alex
Attwood - that "we are in a post-nationalist era".

The people who came out and voted 'No' in the South form the real conscience
of the Irish nation and are saying that despite the purported benefits of
membership of the European Union their souls, their sovereignty, are not up
for sale. The world has to remain a rainbow coalition of independent and
good people, and if 'nationalism' means denying the bad people the authority
to aggrandize power, and in our name to bomb people and nations we do not
know or understand, who are of no threat, then 'nationalism' has to be for
us.

Secondly, at a six-county level, Sinn Fein's rise has changed everything -
even more than the DUP's increase in seats. Sinn Fein taps into a mood for
freedom and generosity: the DUP into fear and intolerance. Working-class
Gerry Adams now has more clout than John Hume in London, Dublin, Washington
and Brussels - though those powers may well be in denial for a while.

Not all Sinn Fein's votes came solely from young people. Thus, it is a great
tribute to former SDLP voters and households, that they had the maturity to
change, to ditch the Gerry Fitt-ism and the nonsense of Alex Attwood, and
embrace a party which will robustly defend their interests on policing,
equality, justice and freedom.

I sat in an RTE studio on Friday with Carmel Hanna of the SDLP and I said to
her that Attwood had made a major blunder by describing West Tyrone as the
party's 'Stalingrad'. She tetchily corrected me and said that it wasn't the
SDLP but the BBC's political correspondent, Stephen Grimason, who invented
the comparison. I made the point that not only had they not demurred from
the analogy but that their spokespersons were enthusiastically quoting it on
a number of occasions. Of course, you can't blame the SDLP alone. They had
their confederates in the media, east of the Bann, part of a campaign
machine which undoubtedly also sorely felt the loss, except that after the
election these hypocrites had the temerity to say that they knew all along
that Doherty would take West Tyrone!

On the unionist side David Trimble lost Strangford to DUP's Iris Robinson,
regained South Antrim from Willie McCrea, lost East Derry to Gregory
Campbell (who could yet turn out to be a pragmatist), and gained North Down
from Bob McCartney. The Ulster Unionists vote overall was up but it is the
perception that counts, those lost seats. Trimble asserted himself in North
Down where he opposed the candidature of Peter Weir and successfully
replaced him with pro- Agreement candidate Lady Sylvia Hermon (with whose
husband, Jack Hermon, I have spent more weekends than her!).

However, not all votes for the Ulster Unionist Party can be said to be votes
for the Good Friday Agreement. The only thing missing from the rabid David
Burnside in his acceptance speech in South Antrim was a Free Presbyterian
dog collar. He demanded IRA decommissioning.

And there will never, ever, be IRA decommissioning, an IRA surrender.

What there is, is a republican commitment to peace, and a commitment to put
the guns beyond use.

So, David Trimble says he will resign on July 1st when the guns aren't
melted down, and the man who may hold the reins for a very short time, is a
man upon whom the Newry and Armagh sun is setting, Seamus Mallon.

For years the coming of a 'political vacuum' has been predicted and that
such a scenario would spark widespread community violence. Look at the
election. Absolutely no support for dissident republicans; the unionists
confused, split, disillusioned, and, even with the DUP's successes, without
any real focus or authority.

In a few years Ian Paisley will know whether there's a God, his
charisma-challenged son will be MP for North Antrim, Peter and Iris will be
a double-act on 'Have I Got News For You', David Burnside will be leader of
the Ulster Unionists, Tony Blair will be in his third term, and we
republicans will be strong, united and confident, and in control of much of
our country and our lives.

Text � Danny Morrison - design �Blacknight Solutions 2000-2001


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