Arab Times

Vote shows united Ireland is ‘doable’

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DUBLIN, March 11, (RTRS): Watershed elections in Northern Ireland have shown Irish nationalis­ts that their goal of uniting with the Republic of Ireland can be achieved, nationalis­t leader of Sinn Fein said on Thursday.

While the pro-British Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) narrowly remained the largest party after last week’s snap elections to the provincial assembly, Sinn Fein surged to within one seat of their rivals and denied unionist politician­s a majority for the first time since Ireland was partitione­d in 1921.

Sinn Fein’s calls for a vote to unite the two sides of the Irish border had already increased after Britain voted to leave the European Union in June.

Adams said nationalis­ts must now win over unionists to the idea of a unified Ireland two decades after their sectarian conflict over Britain’s control of Northern Ireland came to an end. “It was very much a watershed election. It clearly was a vote for Irish unity but the unionists still have a majority (among the population) and there is still a big onus on us to persuade them that this is how their future would best be developed,” Adams told Reuters in an interview.

“I don’t want to see the unionists in the place that nationalis­ts used to be in. We need an entirely new Ireland, we need an Ireland which unionism is comfortabl­e with, that they have an ownership of and that they agree to.”

Nationalis­ts were mainly behind the highest turnout at an election in Northern Ireland in two decades, but analysts said this was more a result of anger towards DUP policies and worries over Brexit, than a push for a united Ireland.

Support for Irish unity is lukewarm south of the border. Just over one third of people surveyed in the Irish Republic said they would like to see a united Ireland in “the short to medium term”, a cross-border opinion poll carried out for the British and Irish state broadcaste­rs found in November 2015.

Adams

Agreement

Before debating Northern Ireland’s constituti­onal status, Sinn Fein, the former political wing of the IRA, must reach an agreement with the DUP to restore their power-sharing government at a time when relations are at their lowest point in a decade.

They have until March 27 to form a government to avoid either devolved power returning to London for the first time since 2007 or the prospect of a third election in less than a year.

“We don’t envisage failure at this point. Maybe we won’t succeed but there really is no reason why, if the will is there, that these talks don’t conclude positively. It’s a process and it’s very much work in progress,” Adams said.

Adams, who was banned from speaking on British airwaves at the height of Northern Ireland’s “Troubles”, forcing broadcaste­rs to dub his voice with that of an actor, said Brexit had already begun to shift opinions on the subject of Irish unity.

Northern Ireland is considered the region of the United Kingdom most economical­ly exposed to Brexit, due to its close trade links to the Irish Republic, an EU member. It will inflict huge damage on every town and village across the island, Adams said.

“It’s not exactly tangible, it’s a sense of expectatio­n, a sense of hope, a sense of doabilty,” Adams, speaking in Dublin’s parliament, where he is a member, said of the feedback his party had received on doorsteps ahead of the election.

“Ten years ago Scottish independen­ce was a minority occupation for men in kilts. Most people in Scotland hadn’t really bought into it but now they have. The same thing is going to happen in my opinion for those of us who want Irish unity.”

A second Scottish independen­ce referendum is now looking inevitable and ministers in the United Kingdom government have now concluded it is a question of when such a vote will be held, the Financial Times reported on Friday.

Scottish First Minister has said that Scotland could hold an independen­ce vote in late 2018, just months before the United Kingdom is due to leave the European Union, though Prime Minister has repeatedly said there is no need for such a vote.

“It’s looking inevitable, I don’t think we’re in any position to stop it happening,” the FT quoted one unidentifi­ed minister close to the discussion­s as saying.

Another unidentifi­ed person briefed on current thinking in PM Theresa May’s office said: “The debate is only going to be about the date.”

The FT said that the London government would fight to delay the vote until after the exit from the European Union.

The prospect of an independen­ce vote in Scotland that could rip apart the United Kingdom just months before an EU exit would add a tumultuous twist to Brexit with uncertain consequenc­es for the world’s fifth largest economy.

The results of the June 23 Brexit referendum called the future of the United Kingdom into question because England and Wales voted to leave the EU but Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to stay.

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