Irish Independent

Hume’s legacy not just the peace process of yesterday, but a shared island of tomorrow

- Etain Tannam Etain Tannam is Associate Professor of Internatio­nal Peace Studies, Trinity College Dublin.

‘The Border is not a line on the map. It is a mental border built on fear, prejudice and misunderst­anding and which can only be eradicated by developing understand­ing and friendship. This is the real task which faces those who genuinely want to solve the Irish problem. Its weakness is that it is undramatic. Its virtue is that it is the only way’. – John Hume, The Derry Journal, March 13, 1970.

IT IS poignant that John Hume’s death coincides nearly perfectly with the new Government’s Shared Island mission, as nothing reflects his influence more than the concept of the shared island, uniting people, not territory, a concept influenced greatly by his admiration for the EU model of post-war reconcilia­tion. UK and Irish membership of the EU was assumed in the 1998 Belfast/Good Friday Agreement that brought peace to Northern Ireland, an agreement that reflected Hume’s belief in the EU as a successful peace project.

However, Brexit ripped that assumption apart and reignited the issue of unificatio­n – of territory, not people. Northern Ireland’s majority vote to remain in the EU in the 2016 Brexit referendum, including 85pc from nationalis­t communitie­s, precipitat­ed calls for a Border poll on unificatio­n, particular­ly from Sinn Féin.

Although Sinn Féin too referred to the aim of tolerance and respect for unionist identity, in 2019 it called for a Border poll in five years, and as such emphasis on consent and reconcilia­tion seemed less central than holding a referendum within a relatively short time frame.

Only the UK Secretary of State for Northern Ireland has the authority to call a referendum on unificatio­n. However, the Irish Government’s policy approach towards unificatio­n is obviously relevant to the management of the issue.

Rather than referring to unificatio­n, the new Programme for Government states “we will draw on the underlying core guiding philosophy of consent and respect for all traditions on our island in our efforts to achieve a consensus on a shared future”. Of key importance is that a new Shared Island unit has been created in the Department of the Taoiseach

to “work towards a consensus on a shared island. This unit will examine the political, social, economic, and cultural considerat­ions underpinni­ng a future in which all traditions are mutually respected”.

The shared-island document is striking in various ways. It is the first time a government has set out a clear and detailed policy to Northern Ireland and Britain since the Brexit referendum in 2016 and indeed before then.

It seeks to manage strategica­lly Brexitindu­ced tensions in Irish/Northern Irish and British-Irish inter-government­al relations. Also in Hume’s tradition, who viewed internal co-operation in Northern Ireland, cross-border co-operation, and British-Irish inter-government­al co-operation as equally important (the three strands of the 1998 agreement), the programme places all three firmly at its centre, emphasisin­g working with the Northern Ireland Executive and UK government to achieve various policy outcomes.

A strategic review of British-Irish relations will occur in 2020/21 and the Government aims to reinvigora­te Strands 2 and 3 of the Good Friday Agreement.

The shared-island document sets out to enhance the role of the British-Irish Intergover­nmental Conference that comprises both government­s and the British-Irish Council that comprises government representa­tives of Northern Ireland, Ireland, Westminste­r, Wales, Scotland and the Crown Dependenci­es.

It also pledges to re-energise the NorthSouth Ministeria­l Council, dealing with cross-border co-operation in designated policy areas of mutual concern. The Government seeks to deepen cross-border relations and relations with the Westminste­r government, as well as bilateral relations with Scotland and Wales.

The Programme for Government does not mention unificatio­n and refers often to the role of the Northern Ireland Executive in devising a shared island. This emphasis has been repeated often by the Taoiseach, stating that a Border poll would be too divisive. It is in the tradition of Hume’s gradualist approach.

Mark Durkan, his first successor as SDLP leader, has emphasised that the Good Friday Agreement’s stipulatio­n that unificatio­n should occur by majority decision-making rule was no accident or rushed decision. Hume, as a parliament­ary democrat, was adamant that just as Northern Ireland’s status in the UK was based on majority support (unionists), so too should nationalis­ts’ unificatio­n preference be implemente­d if they eventually formed a majority of the electorate.

It is positive the Taoiseach met with UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and announced both government­s have agreed to create new UK-Irish structures to be ready for the post-Brexit period.

As Brexit and the Covid pandemic create issues that demand communicat­ion, also as the commemorat­ion of partition is imminent and the shared island section

Taoiseach Micheál Martin with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at Hillsborou­gh Castle in Belfast yesterday. states the Government will “ensure that the Decade of Centenarie­s is marked in an inclusive, appropriat­e, and sensitive manner”, there will be consultati­on with Belfast and London.

Another lesson from Hume is that long-term persistenc­e with a clear message achieves what seems unachievab­le. Micheál Martin shares both Hume’s tenacity and his long-term commitment to the shared island aim, just as the last government tenaciousl­y lobbied the EU to protect the soft border.

The UK government failed to engage about Northern Ireland early on in the Brexit referendum process. However, although imminently engagement may be limited, another lesson from Hume is that long-term persistenc­e with a clear message achieves what seems unachievab­le.

There are many potential pitfalls ahead, not least instabilit­y in the Coalition, exhaustion in reeling from one crisis to another (austerity, Brexit, Covid), and the complexity of building reconcilia­tion without being accused of reneging on unificatio­n.

Hume’s legacy is that belief in change, even in the darkest of times, can make change happen. As Mick Fealty recently observed in the Slugger O’Toole blog, his legacy is not just the peace process of the past, but the shared island of the future.

Belief in change, even in the darkest of times, can make change happen

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PHOTO: REUTERS Common ground:
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