Cracks exposed at heart of N. Irish peace by “cash-for-ash” scandal
BELFAST, (Reuters) After a decade of bitter compromises over paramilitaries and policing, Northern Ireland’s powersharing government finally fell apart this week over the abuse by farmers of a green-energy grant to burn fuels such as wood pellets instead of coal.
The confrontation has exposed a growing rupture in trust between Catholic Irish nationalists and proBritish Protestant unionists whose cooperation underpins the 1998 Good Friday peace agreement that ended three decades of bloodshed.
While there is no sign of a return to violence that killed 3,600 people, the political crisis looks set to paralyse government in the province for months at the same time as Britain’s exit from the European Union threatens simultaneous shockwaves to its economy and constitutional status.
“I’m not sure that power-sharing can be restored now,” Jeffrey Donaldson, a senior member of the ruling proBritish Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) told Irish state radio RTE yesterday, a day after Irish nationalist, and ex-Irish Republican Army (IRA) commander, Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness, resigned over the affair.
“I really don’t think that Martin and his colleagues have begun to contemplate the damage the decision they made yesterday has done to the prospect of power sharing in the future.”
The Good Friday Agreement, negotiated by former U.S. senator George Mitchell and ratified in May 1998, effectively ended the “Troubles” that had torn apart Northern Ireland and was based on a powersharing pact to govern by cross-community consent.
McGuinness’s resignation means a snap election is more than likely, bringing the power-sharing government to the brink of collapse. McGuinness raised the prospect of a lengthy renegotiation of any power-sharing, saying there would be “no return to the status quo” after an election.
There has been a decade of power-sharing between Sinn Fein, once the political arm of the IRA, and the DUP which have overcome fierce disagreements over rival marches, the legacy of the Troubles and constitutional issues.
The green energy scandal proved to be the final tipping point.
For months Northern Irish media have revelled in stories of farmers heating barns night and day to burn as many wood pellets as they and other business owners could to take advantage of a subsidy that gave them 1.60 pounds for every 1 pound spent.
Unlike a similar scheme elsewhere in the United Kingdom legislation lacked a cap and could cost taxpayers up to 490 million pounds ($595 million), almost 5 percent of the region’s annual budget.
First Minister Arlene Foster, who launched the scheme four years ago, apologised, but insisted her party closed it as soon as flaws became apparent.
While her refusal to resign was the trigger for the first collapse of the government since McGuinness agreed to share power with rivals a decade ago, all sides admit that the political fissures go much deeper.
“The heating scandal is the occasion for the resignation, it’s not the cause,” said Brian Feeney, a columnist for Irish nationalist newspaper the Irish News.
“They have a long list of grievances and they have just decided it’s not going to go on any longer.”