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International
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Belfast witnesses night of rioting
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, JULY 28. Fresh violence broke out in Northern Ireland on
Friday even as the British and Irish Governments struggled to
broker a peace deal that would put an end to the deepening
political crisis over the IRA's reluctance to give up its
weapons.
The Northern Ireland Secretary, Dr. John Reid, met Sinn Fein
leaders today after a night of rioting in North Belfast. The
cause was not known but both Unionists and Republicans blamed
each other for starting the riots in which one man received
gunshots and police were attacked with petrol bombs, bottles and
stones. Pitched clashes were reported after some 300 rioters came
on the streets on Friday night and as the trouble centred around
the largely Protestant Ardoyne area, Unionists alleged that it
was provoked by Republicans.
This is the second major flare-up this month which has been
marked by mounting political tension following the resignation of
the Unionist leader, Mr. David Trimble as head of the provincial
coalition government. He resigned on July 1 to force the IRA to
start decommissioning throwing the peace process in a tailspin.
Shortly afterwards, there were a series of clashes in the run-up
to the annual marching season by the Protestant Orangemen.
The marches themselves, however, passed off peacefully, but with
militants on both sides spoiling for a fight, tension has been
running high and a prolonged political vacuum is likely to help
them gain further ground.
Observers said it was significant that Friday's violence came as
the political stalemate deepened with mainstream Unionists and
Republicans virtually rejecting a British-Irish compromise peace
package even without knowing its full details.
The package, which was to have been announced yesterday, has been
put off until next week amid clear signals that neither side is
likely to accept it. Leaked details have angered Unionists as
they believe the package makes too many concessions to
Republicans without addressing their own concerns on arms
decommissioning. Republicans, on the other hand, feel that it
falls short of their minimum conditions for them to think of
decommissioning.
The British Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, however, sought to
keep the hopes alive saying a solution was still possible. ``We
are quite convinced we have the right package of proposals -
fair, reasonable - representing the best way of breaking the
remaining impasse in the implementation of the Good Friday
Agreement,'' he said. His Irish counterpart, Mr. Bertie Ahern
described the package as ``our best effort'' to break the
deadlock.
He said it was not possible to ``do everything for everyone
because of conflicting positions'' but the two Governments had
tried to put together a package which, they believed, would be
acceptable to both sides. Their optimism, however, was drowned in
hardline political rhetoric. The Ulster Unionist Party's tough-
talking M.P., Mr. Jeffrey Donaldson, seen as a potential
successor to Mr. Trimble, accused Mr. Blair and Mr. Ahern of
``misrepresenting'' facts and said: ``It's time for Tony Blair to
come clean with the people of Northern Ireland instead of hiding
behind a subterfuge of spin.''
Mr. Donaldson and another party M.P., Mr. David Burnside have
already called for abandoning the peace process and re-
negotiating the Good Friday Agreement.
Meanwhile, the Democratic Unionist Party has blamed the IRA for
stirring up trouble in vulnerable Protestant areas, while Sinn
Fein blamed Friday's violence on the Protestant Ulster Defence
Association. Whatever be the truth, the flare-up has further
vitiated the climate.
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