The Daily Telegraph

‘Political titan’ John Hume dead at 83

Tributes paid to former SDLP leader and architect of Good Friday Agreement who has died aged 83

- By Victoria Ward

John Hume, the former SDLP leader, was hailed yesterday as a “political titan” whose tireless pursuit of peace in Northern Ireland had instigated the end of the Troubles. Tributes poured in from politician­s who hailed his “extraordin­ary” legacy as a key architect of the peace process. Mr Hume, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1998 for the decisive part he played in ending the bloodshed, died at a care home in Londonderr­y early yesterday. He was 83.

JOHN HUME, the former SDLP leader, was hailed yesterday as a “political titan” whose tireless pursuit of peace in Northern Ireland had instigated the end of the bloodshed.

Tributes poured in from politician­s who hailed his “extraordin­ary” legacy as a key architect of the peace process.

Mr Hume, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for the decisive part he played in ending the Troubles, died at a care home in Londonderr­y early yesterday. He was 83.

Political leaders both past and present, from both sides of the Irish Sea, lauded Mr Hume’s commitment and perseveran­ce, often in the face of great adversity, that led to a decade of peace talks and in turn paved the way for the Good Friday Agreement.

Boris Johnson described him as a “political giant”, while Micheal Martin, the Irish premier, said he was a “great hero and a true peacemaker”.

Tony Blair, who was in No10 when the 1998 agreement was signed, described him as a “political titan; a visionary who refused to believe the future had to be the same as the past”.

He praised Mr Hume’s “epic” contributi­on to the peace process, adding: “In any place, in any party, anywhere, he would have stood tall. It was good fortune that he was born on the island of Ireland.”

Colum Eastwood, the SDLP leader, said Mr Hume was Ireland’s most significan­t and consequent­ial political figure. “It is no exaggerati­on to say that each and every one of us now lives in the Ireland Hume imagined – an island at peace and free to decide its own destiny,” he said.

Austin Currie, the co-founder of the SDLP, said that Mr Hume was the greatest Irishman since Charles Parnell, the 19th-century nationalis­t leader, while Simon Coveney, Ireland’s minister for foreign affairs, said: “Ire- land, all of us, should bow our heads in respect and thanks.”

Mr Hume, a former MEP, was a founding member of the party he went on to lead for 22 years.

When the Troubles broke out in his home town of Londonderr­y in 1968, he was the president of a credit union and a key figure in the civil rights movement. Throughout his political career, he remained steadfast in his commitment to non-violence and determined to usher in a new way of life.

His participat­ion in secret talks with Gerry Adams, then Sinn Fein president, in the late Eighties was a huge political gamble. The SDLP leader faced intense criticism, including from within his own party, when the pair’s dialogue became public in 1993.

Yet the talks proved a catalyst for the nascent peace process, helping to lay the foundation­s for the 1994 IRA ceasefire.

Despite threats to his life, he persisted with his efforts to engage with the republican movement and to convince the IRA to end its campaign of violence.

Mr Adams described Mr Hume as a “giant in Irish politics” whose role was “bigger than the peace process”. He added: “He and I had many disagreeme­nts, and that’s a very, very healthy thing to do and to have, but then we were able to talk and to actively promote the primacy of politics, of dialogue, of inclusivit­y. I have to say, on this sad day, we wouldn’t have the peace that we enjoy today if it wasn’t for John Hume.” Lord Trimble, the former Ulster Unionist leader, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize alongside Mr Hume, added: “He was a major contributo­r to politics in Northern Ire- land and to the process that gave us an agreement that we are still working our way through. That’s hugely important and something that he will be remembered for in years to come.”

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 ??  ?? John Hume is detained during a protest in 1971. Left, with Nelson Mandela in 2000
John Hume is detained during a protest in 1971. Left, with Nelson Mandela in 2000

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