The Borneo Post

Britain to decide Northern Ireland’s fate after talks fail

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BELFAST: Britain’s Northern Ireland minister must decide whether to call another election, return to direct British rule of the province or give parties more time after talks to form a new regional government failed.

Northern Ireland’s parties had until Monday at 1500 GMT to form a new power- sharing government but all said a deal would not be reached after making little progress on a range of issues deeply dividing the two main nationalis­t and unionist parties.

The failure to restore the province’s administra­tion after its collapse in January prolongs a period of political paralysis just as Britain starts talks to leave the European Union that will determine Northern Ireland’s political and economic future.

“We regret very much that there wasn’t sufficient progress made but I think we will return to these issues whenever we get the space to do so,” Conor Murphy, a senior member of Northern Ireland’s largest nationalis­t party, Sinn Fein, told BBC Radio.

Murphy said Britain’s Northern Ireland Minister James Brokenshir­e told the parties he would make a statement in the British parliament on Tuesday. A spokeswoma­n for Brokenshir­e had no immediate comment on the timeline.

By law, Brokenshir­e must go the polls again in ‘a reasonable time’ once the three weeks of postelecti­on talks elapse. Analysts think he could announce fresh elections – the third in a year – but not set a date in a bid to provide extra time.

Both the British and Irish government­s have repeatedly said they are against decision-making being taken back to London for the first time since 2007.

Sinn Fein effectivel­y ended the talks on Sunday when they said agreement could not be reached in disputed issues including funding services for Irish language speakers, gay rights and inquiries into deaths during Northern Ireland’s three decades of sectarian violence.

The two largest parties blamed each other for the collapse. The Democratic Unionist Party’s ( DUP) deputy leader Nigel Dodds said his pro-British party believed Sinn Fein were never serious about getting the executive up and running and ‘played for time.’

Sinn Fein surged to within one seat of the DUP at the March 2 election to deny pro- British unionist politician­s a majority in the regional assembly for the first time since Ireland was partitione­d in 1921.

The election success has emboldened Sinn Fein in increasing calls for its ultimate goal – a referendum to leave the United Kingdom and unite the island of Ireland.

“This was the worst talks process I have ever been engaged in, we didn’t even have a round table discussion. It just makes you wonder what the overall tactic of Sinn Fein is,” said Tom Elliott of the smaller Ulster Unionist Party ( UUP). — Reuters

We regret very much that there wasn’t sufficient progress made but I think we will return to these issues whenever we get the space to do so. Conor Murphy, Sinn Fein senior member

 ??  ?? Sinn Fein’s Michelle O’Neill, Gerry Adams and Mary Lou McDonald join mourners at Martin McGuinness’s funeral in Londonderr­y, Northern Ireland last Tuesday. — Reutes photo
Sinn Fein’s Michelle O’Neill, Gerry Adams and Mary Lou McDonald join mourners at Martin McGuinness’s funeral in Londonderr­y, Northern Ireland last Tuesday. — Reutes photo
 ??  ?? Trump gives a thumbs-up as he and Kushner depart the White House in this file photo. — Reuters photo
Trump gives a thumbs-up as he and Kushner depart the White House in this file photo. — Reuters photo

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