The Scotsman

Partition has stunted all of Ireland

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The centenary of Northern Ireland as a political entity was marked quietly this week which was one Covid benefit.

Otherwise, there might have been a lot more banging of Lambeg drums on one side and gestures of defiance on the other.

Instead, Northern Ireland continues its uneasy peace, the politics as defined as ever by the existence of a border and further confused by the redefiniti­on, for purposes of trade, of where that border lies.

The DUP, not quick thinkers, have woken up to the implicatio­ns of backing Brexit. They ended up with Boris Johnson, whose interest in their fate is distinctly limited, and a border down the Irish Sea, the implicatio­ns still to play out.

Having got rid of Arlene Foster, the DUP will increase the volume of their complaints about betrayal. But what are they going to do about it? The Brexit horse has bolted and the fundamenta­list intransige­nce

of Edwin Poots is not going to bring it back.

What is often forgotten about the partition of Ireland is that it created not one unnaturall­y divided statelet but two; not one territory in which reactionar­y religion held excessive

sway but two; not one society in which politics were twisted into tribal lines but two. Both have had their natural growth stunted by that century of division. With hindsight, it is not hard to see why the Protestant minority opposed a united Ireland. Partition may have seemed like a pragmatic response but it was a disastrous one for the future evolution of the whole island of Ireland.

We cannot change history but it usually makes sense to learn from it.

 ??  ?? 0 A Loyalist paramilita­ry mural pictured in Belfast in January
0 A Loyalist paramilita­ry mural pictured in Belfast in January

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