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Northern Ireland: talks resume following suspension of Assembly
By Steve James
29 November 2002
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Talks convened on November 21 between the British government
and parties represented in the suspended Northern Ireland Assembly,
including Sinn Fein, the Ulster Unionists (UUP) and the Social
Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP).
The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which is opposed to powersharing
with Sinn Fein, is holding discussions separately with the Northern
Ireland Secretary, Paul Murphy.
Despite the factional loathing, all the parties are seeking
to reconstitute the assembly with their own interests best served.
Attracting global investment, from which all the parties hope
to benefit, is focusing their minds in the search for the necessary
stable political environment.
British prime minister Tony Blair suspended the assembly for
the fourth time on October 14 to give the Northern Ireland first
minister David Trimble, leader of the main pro-British Protestant
party, the UUP, room to manoeuvre in the face of a challenge to
his authority from anti-Agreement unionists in his own party and
the DUP. Suspension and the restoration of direct rule from London
was finally triggered by a raid on Sinn Feins office in
the Stormont home of the Assembly. Sinn Fein members were arrested
and accused of spying against the British Northern Ireland Office.
Material seized during Operation Hezz was used by police to
claim that Sinn Fein and the Irish Republican Army (IRA) had used
sources within the state, to follow events in the Northern Ireland
Office and to gather around 2,000 names and addresses of prison
and police officers, leading loyalists, and other state and military
personnel.
Deputy leader of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI),
the successor to the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), Alan McQuillan,
told the press on November 11 that the operation had been underway
for months prior to the raid. He connected the Stormont raid to
police investigations into a break-in at PSNI Special Branch HQ
at Castlereagh in March this year, in which the names of Special
Branch informants were seized. McQuillan said the Castlereagh
investigation had led into the very heart of the IRA.
In addition to the four people arrested on October 4, two civil
servants, including a former under secretary to Trimble, were
subsequently arrested in connection with Operation Hezz.
Unionists seized on the revelations as evidence of the unreconstructed
character of Sinn Fein and the IRA, and the latters determination
to continue a covert civil war. The DUP and the UUP called for
Sinn Fein to be excluded from the powersharing executive, which
currently incorporates the UUP, the DUP, Sinn Fein and the SDLP.
The unionists claims are patently false. The IRA was
engaged in an armed campaign against Britain for decades, during
which intelligence gathering and subversion was the norm. Lined
up against the IRA and Sinn Fein were the combined resources of
the British military intelligence, the Special Branch, hundreds
of informants, state infiltrated loyalist assassination squads,
not to mention the thousands of troops deployed on the streets
of Northern Ireland. For its part the UUP dominated Northern Ireland
politically through its alliance with the British state.
Only the most politically naive would believe that the establishment
of the Assembly has led to this huge British security apparatus
to be dismantled, or that information on Sinn Fein is not regularly
passed to loyalist sources either by Britain or the largely Protestant
police service. Indeed numerous allegations of British forces
bugging Sinn Fein discussions continue. It is hardly surprising
therefore, that Sinn Fein still keeps its own surveillance network
in place.
There have even been suggestions that police initiated the
raid without reference to the British government. The then Northern
Ireland secretary John Reid reportedly swore on hearing news of
it. The new head of the PSNI, Hugh Orde, was out of the country
at the time and later apologised to Sinn Fein for the manner in
which the raid was carried out.
Politically, the raid gave Trimble a much-needed pretext to
force the Assemblys suspension. The UUP has been hemorrhaging
votes to the DUP led by Rev. Ian Paisley. Since the Assemblys
founding in 1999, the DUP, while part of the Executive, has accused
Trimble and the British government of being soft on IRA terrorism
and complained that the Agreement has benefited Catholics at the
expense of Protestants. Through these means the DUP has sought
to present itself as the most vociferous defender of unionist
privilege.
With elections to the assembly due next year, Trimble hoped
to steal his opponents thunder by being seen to take a hardline
against the IRA, while applying maximum pressure on Sinn Fein
to finally disband the organization.
Irish Taoiseach (prime minister) Bertie Ahern, Blair, and John
Reid all made the same demand. Blair insisted, the crunch
is the crunch ... the fork in the road has finally come.
There is every reason to assume that Sinn Fein and the IRA
are willing to comply in the longer term, but this is not an easy
demand to honour. The IRA and Sinn Fein took the fork in the road
when they accepted the legitimacy of the six county state and
pledged to work as a constitutional opposition. The essence of
the Good Friday Agreement was that Sinn Fein and the IRA would
be integrated into the apparatus of the Northern Ireland state
they had once fought to destroy. This was intended to create a
stable political base with which to attract the investment that
had turned the neighbouring Irish Republic into the Celtic
Tiger, while the North stagnated behind its fortified border.
Sinn Feins aim was to secure a share of the spoils from
the exploitation of the Irish workforce, Catholic and Protestant
alike, confident that demographics would eventually ensure their
domination of the six counties and eventual unification with the
south.
Following recent events, Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams quickly
insisted that his party remained committed to the Agreement, and
went out of his way to praise the British governments handling
of the situation. Sinn Feins education minister Martin McGuinness
told the BBC that he had joined the IRA at the age of 19, but
now, my war is over.... My job is to continue to ensure
a political set of circumstances which will never again see British
soldiers or members of the IRA lose their lives as a result of
political conflict.
Although the IRA retains arms and an apparatus, this is now
primarily a bargaining chip to be exchanged for political influence
within the state institutions, including the PSNI. So as not to
overly weaken their negotiating position, in face of mounting
calls for disbandment, the IRA broke contact with the international
commission supervising IRA arms decommissioning led by General
John de Chastelain.
The stakes are high. Immediately prior to the Assemblys
suspension, Trimble announced a new Draft Programme for Government,
subtitled Reinvestment and Reform, in which he set
out the Northern Ireland Executives intentions up until
2005. The 169-page document, agreed upon by all four major parties,
complained that Northern Irelands manufacturing base was
too reliant on traditional industries and that more
modern industry had to be attracted. Other problem areas of the
economy were agriculture and the textile and clothing industries,
both dependent on European Union assistance and low global wage
costs.
Acknowledging the primitive state of infrastructure, the draft
programme called for the rail network to be upgraded, particularly
to the Irish border at Newry, better public transport in Belfast,
and the ancient sewage system to be brought up to standard. Some
£14 billion of spending was needed to develop the infrastructure,
including £6 billion of private capital, it stated. Such
levels of spending can only be raised through the slashing of
existing levels of social spending. The draft warns that the large
public sector in Northern Ireland is a barrier to increased
economic growth. A review must be aimed at achieving value
for money in public administration and services.
The draft programme reiterated the need for greater cooperation
between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic to develop infrastructure,
cross-border trade and tourism. European Union funds were needed
to this end, it stated. Meanwhile Northern Ireland should be promoted
worldwide, and efforts made to overcome the provinces global
image problem.
The Executive has already stated its intention to open offices
in Brussels and Washington. Britain is using the assemblys
suspension, which has enabled it take direct control of Northern
Ireland affairs once again, to push through 22 pieces of legislation
aimed at forwarding this agenda.
What the draft unintentionally describes is a new arena for
vicious factional warfare between the traditional unionist business
interests that have long dominated the north, and the aspiring
Catholic middle class layers represented by Sinn Fein whose social
advance was blocked by the Protestant ascendancy on which British
rule was based.
Even following the Agreement, every road scheme, every cross-border
investment decision, every lucrative contract and comfortably
salaried position becomes part of the turf wars between the sectarian
parties. Moreover, in conditions of deepening world economic crisis,
the investment bonanza of which the Good Friday Agreement sought
to win a share has begun to dry up. This can only stoke up tensions
between the rival groups in the Assembly as they fight for dwindling
resources and encourage them to pit Protestant against Catholic
with even greater vigor.
There remains a powerful desire amongst working people to rise
above the decades of anti-Catholic discrimination and sectarian
bitterness and to provide for democratic rights and decent living
standards for all. But the Good Friday Agreement in no sense laid
the basis for realising such a progressive agenda. These aspirations
can only be taken forward through the construction of a political
movement uniting workers both sides of the border in a common
struggle for genuine social and political equality against the
British, Irish and American governments and their political representatives
in the Assembly.
See Also:
Ireland: Social tensions deepen as the
"Celtic Tiger" staggers
[7 November 2002]
Northern Ireland Assembly faces
fourth suspension
[12 October 2002]
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