The National - News

Years in the making, peace can be destroyed in minutes

▶ Two decades on, Northern Ireland’s Good Friday agreement is under threat from Brexit

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More than 3,500 people were killed between 1969 and 1997 as unionists and republican­s fought a bloody battle on the streets of Northern Ireland, until the Good Friday agreement in 1998 brought an end to “the Troubles”. It paved the way for the devolved system of government that the province enjoys today, with a precious peace that has endured ever since. But earlier this year, Gerry Adams, the former leader of Northern Irish republican party Sinn Fein, declined to call it a settlement. “It is an agreement on a journey,” he said. “Not the destinatio­n.” Two decades on, the deal now seems endangered by Brexit, which threatens to reinstate a hard border with the Republic of Ireland – previously a focal point of sectarian tension. It could tear open old wounds, destroy livelihood­s and foster mistrust between communitie­s co-existing amid a fragile peace. Late last month, the Irish leader Leo Varadkar noted that the European Union and Ireland had “yet to see anything that remotely approaches” a solution. Now the Irish government has given the UK two weeks to come up with a strategy. Thoughtful steps must be taken to limit damage and ensure peace is preserved.

The question of how to maintain peace agreements in changing political, economic and social landscapes is not limited to Northern Ireland and reveals a broader point about their fragility. Today, UK Prime Minister Theresa May faces a host of challenges to ensure a frictionle­ss border in Ireland while dragging Britain out of the EU. They include a chorus of uncompromi­sing, contradict­ory voices, a limited timeframe and shifting public opinion. Indeed, today 69 per cent of Northern Irish voters favour remaining in the EU.

Such complexiti­es are natural in places emerging from bloody conflict. Once agreed, peace is not infinite but requires continued effort and work. Nor is it always popular, since peace agreements cannot right past wrongs. The result of Colombia’s upcoming presidenti­al election could make or break a landmark 2016 reconcilia­tion with leftist Farc rebels. There are attempts to stitch together delicate peace settlement­s in conflicts across the Middle East, from Syria and Lebanon to Yemen. Years in the making, these deals can often be destroyed in minutes. They are nonetheles­s powerful symbols of humanity. It behoves politician­s of all stripes to do all they can to ensure peace prevails.

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