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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, August 08, 2001 |
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A breakthrough in Ulster
THERE HAVE BEEN far too many false dawns over Northern Ireland
that one hesitates to welcome even a genuine movement forward.
For the first time in half a century, the troubled British
province sees light beyond the dark tunnel of sectarian killings.
In a move that has been characterised by its leader as historic,
the Irish Republican Army has given a pledge to put its arsenal
of weapons completely and verifiably beyond use. It is not the
peacenik's ideal goal of total surrender of arms but
decommissioning, by which the IRA will ensure that its
considerable accumulation of weapons would be sealed away beyond
use in a manner that involves no risk to the public and avoids
any possibility of falling into the hands of hardline rivals. The
Canadian General given the task of overseeing the decommissioning
has said he is satisfied with the IRA proposal and that it is in
accordance with the three-year-old, path-breaking Good Friday
Agreement that actually ushered in the current peace process. The
issue of getting rid of weapons has all along bedevilled the 1998
agreement, with the reported decision by the IRA, the most feared
terrorist network in the world and a role model for outfits like
Sri Lanka's LTTE, made possible by a package of proposals
unveiled a week ago jointly by the British and Irish Governments.
The ceasefire, a landmark power-sharing mechanism set up under
the peace process and the not inconsiderable progress at breaking
down barriers achieved so far have ensured that neither side -
the Protestant Unionists who want the province to remain with
Britain and the Catholic Republicans who want merger with the
sectarian friendly Irish Republic - is willing to take the blame
for any setback or breakdown. The blueprint drawn up by the two
Governments marked a major effort at accommodating the fears of
the republican groups. The broad thrust of the package covered
reform of recruitment to the police force, which the republicans
complained was now weighted in favour of the Protestants and did
not fully reflect the composition of the province, and a
programme of demilitarisation involving scaling down the presence
of the British armed forces and the dismantling of army bases.
There was an unmistakable eagerness to meet the demands of the
republicans spearheaded by the IRA and its political arm, the
Sinn Fein led by Mr. Gerry Adams. This had come about from the
realisation that without a movement toward decommissioning of IRA
arms, there was every possibility of the leadership of the rival
Unionists slipping away from moderates like Mr. David Trimble and
falling into the hands of hardliners. There was also the danger
of obscurantist elements like Rev. Ian Paisley getting back to
centre stage.
A hundred years of bloody sectarian strife in Northern Ireland is
not about to end but the peace process has definitely been saved
for now from the war-mongers on both sides of the religious
divide. The massive car bomb explosion triggered in London by a
splinter group of the IRA opposed to reconciliation and the
killing of a Protestant teenager who was felled by a bullet
intended for his Catholic friend underline the continuing,
inexplicable tragedy that is Northern Ireland. Street clashes
between Protestants and Catholics and paramilitary violence have
continued even as the British and the Irish Governments battled
with the peace process. Decommissioning of weapons was perhaps
the most serious of obstacles. Considering that no terrorist
outfit in the world has been successfully convinced by peace-
makers to surrender their arms, what Britain and the Irish
Republic have wrung out of the IRA and the Sinn Fein is a
historic deal. Ulster may yet be beginning to see the light of
peace.
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