Cyprus Today

Ireland, UK will seek to re-establish Northern Ireland talks

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THE Irish and British government­s will seek a way to get talks on restoring Northern Ireland’s power-sharing government back on track and neither is contemplat­ing a return of direct rule from London, Ireland’s foreign minister said on Thursday.

Talks to end a political stalemate broke down yet again on Wednesday after the leader of the largest unionist party said there was no prospect of a deal and called on Britain to take further financial control of the region. The British province has been without a devolved executive, a central part of a 1998 peace deal that ended three decades of violence, for over a year since Irish nationalis­ts Sinn Fein withdrew from the compulsory power-sharing government with their arch-rivals, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP).

“The focus now has to be on trying to get these discussion­s back on track so that the two government­s can find a way of ensuring that the institutio­ns that are the heartbeat of the Good Friday Agreement can be re-establishe­d,” Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney told Irish broadcaste­r RTE.

“Certainly there is no appetite to move towards direct rule [from London]. The statement from the DUP was so unwelcome and so disappoint­ing, but that doesn’t mean we give up.”

The two parties, representi­ng mainly Catholic proponents of a united Ireland and Protestant supporters of continued rule by Britain, have failed to meet a number of deadlines, and the latest round of talks fell apart over disagreeme­nt on additional rights for Irish-language speakers. Appearing to agree with Sinn Fein, Mr Coveney said he had thought the parties had reached an accommodat­ion on the issue in recent days that would have legislated for additional rights as part of a broad recognitio­n of cultural and language diversity.

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