The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pro-British DUP scrape first place in Northern Ireland snap elections

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BELFAST: The pro-British Democratic Unionist Party scraped into first place and Irish republican­s Sinn Fein came a close second in snap elections in Northern Ireland — a dramatic shake-up that deprives unionist parties of a symbolic overall majority for the first time.

The vote was called to resolve a political stalemate between historical rivals DUP and Sinn Fein, who will now have to begin negotiatio­ns to govern together under a power-sharing agreement struck to bring an end to civil strife in the Britishrul­ed province.

Final results from Thursday’s regional elections showed the DUP had won 28 seats and Sinn Fein 27 in the province’s semiautono­mous 90-seat parliament after all ballots were counted yesterday.

The Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) won 12 seats, the Ulster Unionist Party 10, the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland (APNI) eight and others five. The result means pro-British unionist parties will no longer command a majority leadership for the first time since the province was created in 1921.

The DUP and Sinn Fein have jointly governed Northern Ireland following a 1998 peace deal that brought an end to three decades of violence – a period known as The Troubles –in which more than 3,500 people were killed.

The election energised voters, with turnout at 64.8 per cent the highest since the first vote after the 1998 accord known as the Good Friday Agreement.

Exacerbate­d by the Brexit vote, in which the DUP backed leaving the EU while Sinn Fein campaigned to stay, tensions between the two boiled over in January when Sinn Fein collapsed the government by withdrawin­g.

If Sinn Fein still refuse to work with the DUP’s leader Arlene Foster, who was Northern Ireland’s first minister, then the assembly could be suspended and the province fully governed from London.

Foster spoke of ‘challengin­g’ results and conceded to Sky News that it “looks like it has been a very good day for Sinn Fein”.

It was a disastrous night for the Ulster Unionists, whose haul of 10 seats led to the resignatio­n of leader Mike Nesbitt, who said the ‘buck stops here’.

The election was triggered when Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness quit as deputy first minister over a costly, bungled green energy subsidy scheme rolled out by first minister Foster when she was economy minister.

Sinn Fein wanted her to step aside during an investigat­ion and say they will not enter government if the DUP nominates her to become first minister again.

Michelle O’Neill, who took over from the retiring McGuinness as Sinn Fein’s leader in Northern Ireland, told AFP she was willing to find ‘a way forward’ with the DUP. — AFP

 ??  ?? Arlene Foster
Arlene Foster

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