Belfast Telegraph

Mo’s ‘kissing kit’ gift to Irish official

Gesture revealed in declassifi­ed papers

- By Michael Mchugh

TONY Blair’s symbolic apology for the Famine received a “warm” reaction in Irish official circles, official British archives showed.

The former Prime Minister said the people were failed by the Government in London at their hour of need during a disaster which reached its worst point in 1847.

A restricted letter from Donald Lamont, an official in the British Government’s Republic of Ireland affairs section, dated June 2 1997, discussed the Prime Minister’s statement that month on the famine.

It said: “I do not think I could have wished for a better response to the Prime Minister’s statement than that of the Taoiseach reported in your telegram number 178.

“The Irish Embassy have also been warm in their reaction.

“And if (Ulster Unionist) John Taylor is no more than ‘dismissive’ then no harm may have been done in that quarter.”

The 1845-50 humanitari­an disaster was prompted by a potato blight that turned Ireland’s staple crop into a mass of rotting and inedible material. It caused an estimated one million deaths and forced two million starving and destitute Irish to emigrate to other countries including the US and Canada.

Its effects were severely worsened by the actions and inactions of the Whig government, headed by Lord John Russell in the crucial years from 1846 to 1852.

Mr Blair had acknowledg­ed the fact that “one million people should have died in what was then part of the richest, most powerful nation in the world is something that still causes pain”. His statement was read at a Famine commemorat­ion in Co Cork.

Mr Lamont wrote afterwards: “The most obvious downside would be attempts by the Irish to exaggerate the potential parallel with Bloody Sunday. The situations seem to me so different that that ought not to be too difficult to handle.”

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 ??  ?? Starvation: Tony Blair apologised for London’s failure to act over the Irish Famine
Starvation: Tony Blair apologised for London’s failure to act over the Irish Famine

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