Belfast Telegraph

Emails challenge Corbyn claim in victims row

Records show ‘too late’ DUP invite was sent 10 days ago

- BY SUZANNE BREEN POLITICAL EDITOR

THE DUP last night released emails disputing Labour’s account of when an invitation to Jeremy Corbyn — asking him to meet IRA victims while in Northern Ireland — was received.

Labour had claimed it only became aware of the invite from Gregory Campbell MP on Wednesday.

But the DUP invitation was emailed on May 14.

JEREMY Corbyn has insisted he is not advocating or asking for a referendum on Irish unity.

The Labour leader said if he was to become Prime Minister he would only trigger a border poll in line with the terms of the Good Friday Agreement — which stipulates that a vote can only be called if there is evidence that a majority in Northern Ireland would support reunificat­ion.

Mr Corbyn, who in the past made no secret of his support for reunificat­ion, was pressed on the issue on his first visit here as Labour leader.

He fielded questions from students at Queen’s University in Belfast a day after his official spokesman said Mr Corbyn believed there was majority support for unificatio­n across the island of Ireland.

A border poll, which would see separate votes north and south, can only be called if the UK Government believe a majority within Northern Ireland is in favour of unity.

Asked by a politics student whether he would call a referendum if he became Prime Minister, Mr Corbyn responded: “That would be a decision that would be made within the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.

“If that is a wish then clearly such a poll would happen.

“I am not asking for it, I am not advocating it. What I am asking for is a return to the fullness of the Good Friday Agreement, which would open up the opportunit­y and possibilit­y for the future of Ireland as a whole.

“That is the point of the Good Friday Agreement. Not direct rule, not imposition of a political view from Westminste­r but devolution of powers to Stormont here (in Belfast), and of course the relationsh­ip with the Republic.

“It’s quite clear that it’s there for a poll on both sides of the border should that be something that is demanded.

Earlier Mr Corbyn warned that Northern Ireland stood at a potential crossroads between a strengthen­ed peace or a return to the dark days of the past.

He urged Stormont l eaders and the UK and Irish Government­s to renew efforts to restore powershari­ng at the crisis-hit institutio­ns in Belfast, insisting peace cannot be taken for granted.

Giving a lecture at Queen’s to mark 20 years since the signing of the historic Good Friday Agreement, Mr Corbyn said: “As we stand here today in celebratio­n of 20 years of peace, we must also recognise we are standing at a potential crossroads.

“It is right we celebrate the achievemen­ts, not least as it is those achievemen­ts we must use as a springboar­d for the 20 years to come.

“We must neither be complacent, nor reckless. So I want to send this message to the people of this island — Labour is as committed to the Good Friday Agreement as we have ever been.

“It has served us well for 20 years and, with commitment and determinat­ion, will provide us with the framework for the next 20.

“And with that in mind I want to make a plea to all parties and all sides. We must do all we can to make power-sharing work again in Stormont. We need all sides to come together and make devolution work again.

“That means tough choices. It means compromise and give and take. But we owe it to the people of these islands not to allow political disagreeme­nts to open the way for any return to the grim days of the past.” Northern Ireland has been wi t hout a properly functionin­g powershari­ng government for more than 16 months due to a bitter stand-off between the two biggest parties, the DUP and Sinn Fein.

A row that broke out over a botched green energy scheme, and widened t o encompass l ong- standing disputes such as the Irish language, gay marriage and Troubles legacy issues, shows no sign of resolution.

Mr Corbyn, who made clear his support for an end to the ban on same-sex marriage in the region, urged the revival of a contentiou­s peace process mechanism to enable the UK and Irish Government­s to work together to save power-sharing.

He called on Prime Minister Theresa May to reconvene the British Irish Intergover­nmental Conference — a body that offers the Irish a consultati­ve role in non-devolved matters concern- ing Northern Ireland. Sinn Fein and the SDLP have been demanding the re-establishm­ent of the conference, which last sat in 2007, as a means to plot a way forward amid the devolution crisis in Belfast.

However, unionists are wary of the body, and associated suggestion­s that the Irish Government could have a significan­t role in deciding the next steps for the region’s rudderless public services.

DUP leader Arlene Foster has dismissed the conference as a “talking shop” and instead called for direct rule UK ministers to take decisions on Northern Ireland at Westminste­r until such time as a power-sharing administra­tion can be pieced back together at Stormont.

Mr Corbyn, who is spending two days in Northern Ireland, also used his speech at Queen’s to make clear that Labour will not support a Brexit deal which results in the re-imposition of a hard border on the island.

He argued that the best way to avoid border checks is through a UK-EU customs union — which would offer the UK a say on future trade deals — coupled with a “new and strong relationsh­ip” with the EU single market.

“Driven by the free-market fantasists within their ranks, the reckless Conservati­ve approach to Brexit is a very real threat to jobs and living standards here in Northern Ireland and risks underminin­g and destabilis­ing the co-operation and relative harmony of recent years,” said Mr Corbyn, who will visit the border on Friday.

“Labour will not support any Brexit deal that includes the return of a hard border to this island. But we are also clear there must be no border created in the Irish Sea either.

“That is why Labour has put forward a plan that would go a long way to solving this issue, a plan for which I believe there is a majority in Westminste­r.”

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 ??  ?? Jeremy Corbyn is greeted by Professor James McElnay at Queen’s University
Jeremy Corbyn is greeted by Professor James McElnay at Queen’s University
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