Bangkok Post

DUP leader not solely to blame in N Ireland “cash for ash” scandal

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>>BELFAST: Northern Ireland First Minister Arlene Foster was one of a number of policymake­rs criticised in an inquiry on Friday into the so-called “cash for ash” scandal, which caused a three-year suspension of the province’s government until January.

Northern Ireland’s political establishm­ent was rocked in 2016 when it emerged that farmers were heating barns night and day to burn as many wood pellets as they could to take advantage of a flawed green-energy subsidy that gave them 1.60 pounds (62 baht) for every 1 pound spent.

The scheme, which was overseen by then enterprise minister Ms Foster, exposed Northern Ireland to hundreds of millions of pounds in costs and led to Irish nationalis­ts Sinn Fein walking out of the power-sharing government with Foster’s Democratic Unionist Party over her role.

A judge-led inquiry found Ms Foster should not have signed off on documents provided by officials which did not contain all necessary informatio­n, but that she had been ill-advised by her special advisors and department staff.

While Sinn Fein initially insisted it could not return to power with the DUP if Ms Foster remained as leader, the parties agreed to form a new government two months ago without such preconditi­ons and Ms Foster was reappointe­d first minister.

“For my part, I am determined to learn from my mistakes and to work to ensure the mistakes and systematic failures of the past are not repeated,” said Ms Foster, who previously apologised after initially dismissing criticism of her role as a misogynist.

“Whilst I, my party and others have much to reflect upon, I am pleased there has been no finding to support those who alleged improper motivation,” she said, reiteratin­g her apology.

Retired High Court Judge Patrick Coghlin listed a mass of failures in the 656-page report and said the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme was “a project too far” for the devolved government, establishe­d as part of a 1998 peace deal that ended three decades of political and sectarian violence in Northern Ireland.

While it identified some instances where behaviour was unacceptab­le, the inquiry found “corrupt or malicious activity on the part of officials, ministers or special advisers was not the cause of what went wrong with the NI (Northern Ireland) RHI”.

Unlike a similar scheme elsewhere in the United Kingdom, the legislatio­n in Northern Ireland lacked a cap, leaving taxpayers exposed to up to 490 million pounds, almost 5% of the region’s annual budget.

 ??  ?? FACING CRITICISM: Northern Ireland’s First Minister, and Leader of the DUP, Arlene Foster leaves Downing Street in central London last week.
FACING CRITICISM: Northern Ireland’s First Minister, and Leader of the DUP, Arlene Foster leaves Downing Street in central London last week.

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