The Mercury

Irish ex-leader in court on sex charges

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JEFFREY Donaldson, former leader of Northern Ireland’s main pro-UK unionist party, had his bail extended yesterday in his first court appearance on sex offence charges.

Donaldson, 61, one of the province’s best-known politician­s, has previously said he will be “strenuousl­y contesting” the allegation­s. In yesterday’s court hearing, he did not enter a plea.

He is facing one charge of rape, one count of gross indecency towards a child and nine counts of indecent assault on a female, according to the Northern Ireland Court Service.

The two complainan­ts, whose accusation­s span a 20-year period between 1985 and 2006, cannot be named for legal reasons. The politician, who is an MP in the UK parliament, resigned as leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) on March 29 after he was charged by police.

His wife Eleanor Donaldson, 58, who is employed as his parliament­ary secretary, is facing four charges spanning a 10-year period. During a brief court hearing yesterday, Donaldson and his wife stood in the dock as the charges were read out.

The pair were released on continuing bail, with the next court date scheduled for May 22, although they will not be required to attend.

The case is expected to come to trial in a year.

Security was tight around the court in Newry, 60km south of Belfast, as several paramilita­ry group members are also attending unrelated hearings yesterday.

Donaldson said nothing as arrived at court, where police battled to hold back a media scrum. A devout churchgoer, he wore the ancient Christian symbol of a fish in his lapel.

A long-time player in Northern Irish unionist politics, Donaldson became DUP leader in 2021.

The party collapsed power-sharing at the Northern Ireland assembly in Belfast in February 2022 in protest at post-Brexit trade arrangemen­ts for Northern Ireland, which shares the UK’s only land border with the EU.

It argued that the trade terms – agreed to avoid a so-called hard border with EU member the Republic of Ireland to the south and preserve peace after 30 years of sectarian conflict over British rule – risked cutting Northern Ireland adrift from the rest of the UK.

Donaldson announced in February that the party had struck a deal with the government to break the deadlock, paving the way for the assembly to resume.

The resumption of power-sharing led to Sinn Fein’s Michelle O’Neill making history by becoming Northern Ireland’s first pro-Irish nationalis­t leader.

As well as being the second largest party in the Northern Irish assembly behind Sinn Fein, the DUP had eight MPs in the UK parliament until Donaldson was suspended.

Donaldson, who received a knighthood in 2016, is the longest serving MP with a Northern Irish constituen­cy, having been first elected in 1997. He had been expected to lead the DUP into a general election this year but is now expected to quit.

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