Belfast Telegraph

DUP’s Hamilton says prospects of return to Stormont looking ‘bleak’

- BY DAVID YOUNG, PA

THE power-sharing impasse in Northern Ireland is likely to extend throughout the year and potentiall­y beyond, a senior Democratic Unionist has said.

Simon Hamilton said he did not think an agreement between his party and Sinn Fein to restore devolution would materialis­e in 2018.

“I think the prospects of a return to devolution in the shortterm are bleak,” he told MPs at Westminste­r.

Mr Hamilton added: “It gives me no pleasure to say that I don’t think that is going to happen in the short-term.

“I don’t see it happening this year and perhaps even beyond.”

Mr Hamilton, who was briefing members of the NI Affairs Committee on the long-running power-sharing crisis, blamed Sinn Fein’s “scorched earth” policy for poisoning relations between the parties.

The DUP continues to reject Sinn Fein claims it had struck a draft agreement last month before reneging in the face of a grassroots backlash from party supporters angry that potential concession­s on the vexed issue of the Irish language were in the offing.

Mr Hamilton (right) said media reports suggesting that a draft deal had been done, with claims DUP leader Arlene Foster had handed over a hard copy to Sinn Fein’s Michelle O’Neill, were the result of “mischief making” and “selective leaking” by the republican party.

The Strangford Assembly member has been a key member of the DUP’s negotiatin­g team through the various rounds of ill-fated negotiatio­ns during the 14-month impasse.

He defended the leadership of Mrs Foster and said she had headed up the negotiatio­ns at all stages of the process.

Mr Hamilton claimed reasons preventing the restoratio­n of de- volved government included Sinn Fein “intransige­nce” and the party’s continued “eulogising” of the IRA.

“Their behaviour in recent days and their behaviour in recent weeks suggest to me that they are not serious about getting devolution back,” he said.

Sinn Fein’s Conor Murphy said the only option was for the UK and Irish government­s to chart the way ahead through the British Irish Intergover­nmental Conference — a peace process structure that gives the Dublin administra­tion a consultati­ve role on certain Northern Ireland issues.

“If these comments reflect the position of the DUP leadership, then clearly that party has checked out of the power-sharing institutio­ns or any renewed effort to restore them,” Mr Murphy said.

“This follows their decision to renege on the draft agreement and to crash the talks process in the face of opposition from their own most right-wing, anti-agreement elements. But our public services and the rights of citizens cannot be held to ransom by the DUP’s refusal to close on an agreement which they negotiated over 14 months.

“So, in that context, there is a renewed onus on the two government­s to urgently convene the British-Irish intergover­nmental conference to implement previous agreements and pave the way for a restoratio­n of the Executive by addressing the British government commitment to an Irish Language Act, the release of funds for legacy inquests, progressin­g the legacy mechanisms and safeguardi­ng the rights of citizens including the right to marriage equality.”

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