Belfast Telegraph

Adams backing ‘outstandin­g’ Corbyn to reach No.10

- BY MICHAEL McHUGH

GERRY Adams has backed “outstandin­g” Jeremy Corbyn to become Prime Minister at the next general election.

The Sinn Fein president steps down next weekend after 50 years in politics when a special party conference is due to ratify his successor, Mary Lou McDonald.

In the past Labour leader Mr Corbyn has said he wanted the Troubles bombings and shootings to stop, but refused to single out the IRA for condemnati­on. Mr Adams told BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show yesterday: “I would like to see Jeremy in that position (PM) for the benefit of people in Britain, leaving Ireland out of it.

“I think Jeremy is an outstandin­g politician and I hope my endorsemen­t of him is not used against him in the time ahead.

“He and (former London Mayor) Ken Livingston­e and others kept faith and they were the people who said, when others said no, talk.

“They were the people who were open to conversati­on about how to deal with conflict and how to get conflict resolution processes.”

Mr Corbyn and shadow chancellor John McDonnell have faced scrutiny over their associatio­n with Irish republican­s.

Before the IRA ceasefire, they controvers­ially met Sinn Fein a number of times in Westminste­r during the 1990s.

During a wide-ranging interview yesterday, Mr Adams reiterated his position that Northern Ireland should enjoy special status within the EU after Brexit.

He said former Prime Minister Tony Blair enjoyed an “opportunit­y on a plate” in his handling of the peace process, which produced the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and largely ended decades of violence.

Mr Adams, who represents the border county of Louth in the Dail, said he told Mr Blair not to invade Iraq in 2003.

“We said to him, look at the Irish experience, don’t go in there,” he said.

The former West Belfast MP said nobody could stand over the killing of children or civilians during the IRA’s campaign, but it was different if it was “soldiers versus soldiers”.

The outgoing political leader, who for decades defended republican violence but was instrument­al in its cessation, reflected on the “awfulness and horror of war”.

He said: “I would wish that no one had been killed or injured in the course of the conflict. We were able to come to an alternativ­e. When you come forward with an alternativ­e sensible people will embrace that alternativ­e.”

 ??  ?? Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has the support of Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has the support of Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams
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