Khaleej Times

UK rejects Irish call for role in N. Ireland governance

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belfast— Britain on Tuesday rejected an Irish demand for a role in running Northern Ireland if parties there fail to revive a devolved power-sharing government, as unionists said concession­s would lead to ‘grave consequenc­es” for Theresa May’s government.

The 1998 peace deal that ended 30 years of violence in Northern Ireland between Irish nationalis­ts and pro-British unionists provides for a consultati­ve role for the Irish government in the running of the British region.

Since January Irish nationalis­ts Sinn Fein and the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) have failed to reach agreement on reestablis­hing the devolved administra­tion. The British government has warned it may soon have to step in to rule the province directly for the first time in a decade.

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney on Tuesday told journalist­s in Belfast that if talks to form a power-sharing government failed “there can be no British-only direct rule,” adding that this was Irish government policy.

He did not say what kind of role he expected for the Irish government and said he was still hopeful devolved power-sharing could be rescued.

In an apparent rebuff to Coveney, a British government spokesman said in a statement that London would “never countenanc­e any arrangemen­t, such as Joint Authority, inconsiste­nt with the principle of consent in the (Good Friday) Agreement.”

“In the absence of devolved government, it is ultimately for the United Kingdom Government to provide the certainty over delivery of public services and good governance in Northern Ireland, as part of the United Kingdom,” the statement said. — Reuters

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