San Francisco Chronicle

Nobel laureate for peace accord in N. Ireland

- By Danic Kirka Danica Kirka is an Associated Press writer.

LONDON — John Hume, the visionary politician who won a Nobel Peace Prize for fashioning the agreement that ended violence in his native Northern Ireland, has died at 83, his family said Monday.

The Catholic leader of the moderate Social Democratic and Labor Party, Hume was seen as the principal architect of Northern Ireland’s 1998 peace agreement. He shared the prize later that year with the Protestant leader of the Ulster Unionist Party, David Trimble, for their efforts to end the sectarian violence that plagued the region for three decades and left more than 3,500 people dead.

“I want to see Ireland as an example to men and women everywhere of what can be achieved by living for ideals, rather than fighting for them, and by viewing each and every person as worthy of respect and honor,” he said in 1998. “I want to see an Ireland of partnershi­p, where we wage war on want and poverty, where we reach out to the marginaliz­ed and dispossess­ed, where we build together a future that can be as great as our dreams allow.”

Hume died Monday morning after suffering from ill health for several years, his family said.

Born on Jan. 18, 1937, in Northern Ireland’s second city — Londonderr­y to British Unionists, Derry to Irish nationalis­ts — Hume trained for the priesthood before becoming a fixture on Northern Ireland’s political landscape. An advocate of nonviolenc­e, he fought for equal rights in what was then a Protestant­ruled state, but he condemned the Irish Republican Army because of his certainty that no injustice was worth a human life.

Although he advocated for a united Ireland, Hume believed change could not come to Northern Ireland without the consent of its Protestant majority.

He championed the notion of extending selfgovern­ment to

Northern Ireland with power divided among the groups forming it.

While both Hume and Trimble credited the people of Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic for approving a referendum that led to power sharing, it was Hume’s diplomacy that offered the impetus to the peace process that led to the 1998 Good Friday accord.

Former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton issued a statement describing their sadness at Hume’s death.

“Through his faith in principled compromise, and his ability to see his adversarie­s as human beings, John helped forge the peace that has held to this day,” they said.

 ?? Liam McBurney / Associated Press ?? A man walks past a mural that shows politician John Hume, Martin Luther King Jr., Mother Teresa, and Nelson Mandela in Londonderr­y, Northern Ireland.
Liam McBurney / Associated Press A man walks past a mural that shows politician John Hume, Martin Luther King Jr., Mother Teresa, and Nelson Mandela in Londonderr­y, Northern Ireland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States