Kuwait Times

‘Over and out’: Foster quits as N Ireland leader

-

BELFAST: Arlene Foster formally stepped down as Northern Ireland’s first minister yesterday, bringing further instabilit­y to the British-ruled province where tempers are already frayed over post-Brexit trading arrangemen­ts. The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) politician called for cool heads to prevail but warned that the “Northern Ireland protocol” has seeded dangerous discontent.

“Politics in Northern Ireland, between the UK and Ireland, and the UK and the EU, is out of balance, an imbalance created by the protocol,” she told lawmakers in the regional assembly at Stormont.

She said the protocol-which since the start of 2021 has effectivel­y kept Northern Ireland in the EU customs

union and single market for goods-”is not a real partnershi­p”. “An imbalance and an instabilit­y is built in, that will fester and deteriorat­e,” she warned. “Imbalance and instabilit­y in the context of Northern Ireland is a truly dangerous cocktail.”

Fears of unrest

In early April, Northern Ireland-divided between pro-UK unionists and pro-Ireland nationalis­ts-saw a week of rioting fuelled by anger over the protocol. At least 88 police officers were injured in scenes reminiscen­t of “The Troubles”, the sectarian conflict over British rule of Northern Ireland, which ended in 1998.

There are fears unrest will reignite over the summer months, a traditiona­l time of disruption in the province marked by hardline unionist marches. Europe has already threatened London with reprisals if it extends a grace period on checks on chilled meat products, in a row that overshadow­ed last weekend’s G7 talks. UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said he will do “whatever it takes” to protect UK territoria­l integrity, calling on Brussels to take into account the complexiti­es and fragile peace in Northern Ireland.

Parting shots

As first minister and DUP leader Foster, 50, vehemently opposed the Northern Ireland protocol, which enforces checks on goods arriving from mainland Britain to prevent them entering the EU by the backdoor via EU member Ireland. But she was powerless to prevent Johnson imposing it.

In April she was forced to announce her resignatio­n by DUP colleagues who felt she took a soft stance against the new arrangemen­ts, which many unionists feel have driven a wedge between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK. Under terms of a power-sharing deal, Foster’s resignatio­n will see deputy first minister Michelle O’Neill, of pro-Ireland Sinn Fein, also step down. Both parties now have seven days to agree who will step back in to fill the leadership roles. The DUP have selected regional lawmaker Paul Givan-a Brexit hardliner-as their pick to replace Foster. But if the parties cannot agree to rule in tandem, a snap election will be called. There have been early signs that negotiatio­ns to replace Foster may be fraught by a long-running standoff over government provisions for Irish language speakers. —AFP

 ??  ?? BELFAST: Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader Arlene Foster gives an interview after learning that Deputy Leader of the DUP (Democratic Unionist Party) Nigel Dodds has lost his seat to Sinn Fein’s new MP for North Belfast John Finucane at the count centre in Belfast, in the UK general election. — AFP
BELFAST: Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader Arlene Foster gives an interview after learning that Deputy Leader of the DUP (Democratic Unionist Party) Nigel Dodds has lost his seat to Sinn Fein’s new MP for North Belfast John Finucane at the count centre in Belfast, in the UK general election. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait