Belfast Telegraph

200 key nationalis­ts pen letter urging Varadkar to safeguard rights of north’s Irish citizens

- BY ED CARTY

MORE than 200 figures from Northern Ireland society have written to Taoiseach Leo Varadkar warning that the UK’s split from Europe is offensive and unacceptab­le.

Among the names from the world of sport, the arts, business, community work and the legal sector are Republic of Ireland footballer James McClean and Queen’s University Professor Phil Scraton, who campaigned to expose the Hillsborou­gh disaster.

The group, which also sent the letter to The Irish News in Belfast and The Irish Times in Dublin, described themselves as Irish citizens and criticised the near year-long deadlock at Stormont.

“The impending reality of Brexit now threatens to reinforce partition on this island and revisit a sense of abandonmen­t as experience­d by our parents and grandparen­ts,” they said.

“The fact that a majority of voters in the north of Ireland voted to remain within the EU must not be ignored. Against the stated will of a majority of voters in the north, and notwithsta­nding recent announceme­nts, Brexit pushes us all into uncharted territory, with huge uncertaint­y for business and the economy, and continuing doubts about what this will mean in reality for Irish and European citizens living in this region.

“We, our children and grandchild­ren, should not be forced out of the EU against our democratic will. All of this is offensive and unacceptab­le to us and many others.”

Other signatorie­s included Olympic boxers Michael Conlan and Paddy Barnes and solicitor Darragh Mackin of KRW Law, who helped secure the release of Irishman Ibrahim Halawa after four years in jail in Egypt.

They attacked Prime Minister Theresa May’s pact with the DUP and said it has become a grave threat to political progress.

“We appeal urgently to you, Taoiseach, and to the Irish Government, to reassure us of your commitment to stand for equality and a human rights based society and your determinat­ion to secure and protect the rights of all citizens in the north of Ireland,” they said.

The signatorie­s said the institutio­ns establishe­d under the Good Friday Agreement have seen a concerted underminin­g in recent years and that the London and Dublin government­s have taken a laissez-faire approach to the 1998 accord.

“Despite the British Government’s co-equal and internatio­nally binding responsibi­lity for overseeing the peace process with the Irish Government, we have no confidence in its commitment to do so with impartiali­ty or objectivit­y,” they said.

 ??  ?? Appeal: Leo Varadkar
Appeal: Leo Varadkar

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