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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, December 13, 2000 |
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Clinton upbeat amid scepticism
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, DEC. 12. The U.S. President, Mr. Bill Clinton, launched
his peace `mission' in Ireland today saying he had come to
`purge' the province of the `demons of the past' but his upbeat
statement was not quite matched by the mood on the ground which
remained sceptical.
With neither the Unionists nor the Republicans inclined to make
concessions, no breakthrough in the stalled peace process was
expected as Mr. Clinton began his three-day visit to Ireland and
U.K., his last official excursion abroad before he lays down
office next month.
The Northern Ireland Secretary, Mr. Peter Mandelson, instead
chose to stress Mr. Clinton's contribution to the peace efforts
and hoped that his presence would `warm up' the climate which, in
the past month, has become frosty enough to start worrying the
British Government, and indeed all those who have been working to
restore peace in the region.
Mr. Clinton had his work cut out as he prepared to appeal to the
two sides to get the Good Friday Agreement back on the rails. His
talks in Dublin, where he arrived this morning, were seen only as
of a `symbolic' nature and the real business starts tomorrow when
he meets representatives of the Unionists and the Sinn Fein in
Belfast.
The Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, would also be present during
the talks to be held at the Stormont Castle. Basically, he would
try and persuade the Sinn Fein to start the process of arms
decommissioning by the IRA which the Unionists say is the main
roadblock to the implementation of the Good Friday Agreement. For
the Unionists, Mr. Clinton's message would be to revoke their ban
on the Sinn Fein participation in cross-border ministerial
meetings. These are the two main sticking points, apart from
other peripheral issues like the Sinn Fein's insistence on
reducing security presence in Northern Ireland and its
reservations on the new policing.
Mr. Clinton, accompanied by his wife Hillary and daughter
Chelsea, were received by the Irish President, Ms. Mary McAleese,
who is incidentally the first Irish head of state to come from
Northern Ireland. Later, he had discussions with the Irish Prime
Minister, Mr. Bertie Ahern, and visited Dundalk which is the
heart of Republican dissidence before leaving for Belfast late in
the evening.
The visit coincides with an escalation of sectarian violence in
Northern Ireland, mainly engineered by the Real IRA - the IRA
dissidents who broke off from the parent body when it signed the
Good Friday Agreement. Mr. Mandelson has warned of a `real
threat' of terrorist attacks in the run-up to Christmas and New
Year's festivities. The British media meanwhile is speculating
about Mr. Clinton's continued involvement in Irish affairs even
after he relinquishes office and there is a talk that he might
cast himself in the role of a peace envoy to Northern Ireland -
like the former U.S. Senator, Mr. George Mitchell, who is a peace
envoy to West Asia.
A spokesman for Mr. Clinton however sought to play down such
speculation and was quoted in The Guardian as saying: ``We have
to see what happens in the next few weeks.''
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