Oman Daily Observer

Northern Ireland talks to begin after transforma­tive election

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DUBLIN: Northern Irish leaders prepared on Saturday for three weeks of challengin­g talks to save their devolved government after a snap election that could have dramatic implicatio­ns for the politics and constituti­onal status of the British province.

The pro-British Democratic Unionist Party narrowly remained the largest party following the closest-ever election for the provincial assembly. But surging Irish nationalis­ts Sinn Fein came within one seat of their rivals to deny unionist politician­s a majority for the first time since Ireland was partitione­d in 1921.

Major policy difference­s between the sides risk paralysing government and dividing communitie­s just as Britain prepares to leave the European Union. Northern Ireland, the poorest region of the United Kingdom, which has its only land border with the EU, is considered the most economical­ly exposed to Brexit.

“Everything has changed and we enter into a new political landscape from Monday,” outgoing finance minister Mairtin O’Muilleoir of Sinn Fein told national Irish broadcaste­r RTE.

The two largest parties have three weeks to form a new power-sharing government to avoid devolved power returning to London for the first time since 2007.

With relations at their lowest point in a decade and Sinn Fein insisting among its conditions that DUP leader Arlene Foster step aside before it will re-enter government, few analysts think an agreement can be reached in that time.

An acrimoniou­s campaign also added to the friction. Foster’s outright rejection of some Sinn Fein’s demands by saying that “if you feed a crocodile, it will keep coming back looking for more” antagonise­d and rallied nationalis­ts.

Michelle O’Neill, the 40-year- old new leader of Sinn Fein whose elevation represente­d a generation­al shift within the former political wing of the Irish Republican Army, benefited most from the highest turnout in two decades.

“Foster angered nationalis­ts and made sure they went out to vote but Michelle O’Neill is also a much more acceptable nationalis­t face than previously,” said Gary Thompson, a 57-year-old voter, as he went for a jog near parliament buildings.

Pensioner Tom Smyth, a DUP supporter, said Foster had to stand up to Sinn Fein but in doing so probably helped mobilise their rivals’ vote.

“This is terrible,” he said. “There will be no living with them (Sinn Fein) now. All my life there has been a Unionist political majority. I feel a bit exposed now and wonder what the future holds.”

Nationalis­t candidates, traditiona­lly backed by Catholics, also narrowed the gap overall with unionists, who tend to be favoured by Protestant­s, to just one seat. Smaller, non-sectarian parties captured the remaining 12 per cent of the vote.

Northern Ireland is still marginally a mainly Protestant province but demographi­cs suggest Catholics could become the majority within a generation. The shift in the election will embolden Sinn Fein in its ultimate goal of uniting Ireland.

The party has increased calls for a border poll since Northern Ireland, like Scotland, voted to remain in the EU while the United Kingdom’s two other countries, England and Wales, chose to leave.

Sinn Fein’s O’Muilleoir described Brexit as “the gift that keeps on giving” for those that want a united Ireland.

“The massive shift towards nationalis­m in this election completely changes the landscape and most certainly brings the constituti­onal question to the foreground,” said Peter Shirlow, Director of Irish Studies at the University of Liverpool.

Taking over the administra­tion of Northern Ireland is not a prospect likely to please British prime minister Theresa May, already fighting a renewed independen­ce push from Scotland as she readies her Brexit launch at the end of the month.

Her Northern Ireland Minister James Brokenshir­e urged the parties to engage intensivel­y in the short time available.

 ?? — AFP ?? Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader Arlene Foster makes a speech after being elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly at the count centre in Omagh, Co Tyrone, Northern Ireland, on Friday.
— AFP Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader Arlene Foster makes a speech after being elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly at the count centre in Omagh, Co Tyrone, Northern Ireland, on Friday.

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