Cape Times

Ex-IRA man hailed for peace role Tributes as McGuinness dies at 66

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BELFAST: Martin McGuinness, the Irish Republican Army commander who laid down his arms to become a key architect of Northern Ireland’s peace, died yesterday aged 66, prompting tributes from allies and former enemies alike.

The face of Irish Republican­ism for many during some of the worst moments of three decades of sectarian bloodshed that killed more than 3 600 people, McGuinness remained a figure of hate for many pro-British Protestant­s until his death.

But he earned widespread respect across Britain and Ireland by embracing his bitterest rivals to cement a 1998 peace deal and allow Northern Ireland to slowly return to normality.

“While I can never condone the path he took in the earlier part of his life, Martin McGuinness ultimately played a defining role in leading the Republican movement away from violence,” British Prime Minister Theresa May said.

“In doing so, he made an essential and historic contributi­on to the extraordin­ary journey of Northern Ireland from conflict to peace.”

He was present during the opening salvos of the Northern Ireland conflict as a 20-year-old IRA commander fighting the British army on the streets of his native Londonderr­y on behalf of a community he said had been denied basic human rights.

McGuinness swiftly rose to become a senior IRA commander and was convicted in 1973 of being a member of the group after being stopped in a car packed with explosives and bullets.

“Martin McGuinness never went to war, it came to his streets, it came to his city, it came to his community,” fellow Republican leader Gerry Adams told Irish national broadcaste­r RTE yesterday.

“He was a great man in my opinion and he will be missed.”

By the 1980s, McGuinness emerged alongside Adams as a key architect in the electoral rise of Sinn Fein, the IRA’s political wing, advocating a strategy of using the ballot box alongside the Armalite rifle.

Following the IRA’s second ceasefire in 1997, McGuinness became Sinn Fein’s chief negotiator in peace talks that led to the landmark 1998 Good Friday peace accord.

“He had the grassroots credibilit­y of a Republican leader and former IRA commander… to take Republican­s from the past of terror and horror into a democratic future,” former British Northern Ireland minister Peter Hain told BBC radio. But it was the energy with which he worked in the peace process that surprised many. His handshake with the British Queen in 2012 became one of the defining images of Northern Ireland’s peace.

Key to the success of power-sharing in Northern Ireland was the close relationsh­ip with former enemy Ian Paisley, the firebrand preacher many Catholics see as a key player in the genesis of the conflict.

A partnershi­p many thought would prove impossible was soon dubbed by the media “the Chuckle Brothers” and allowed McGuinness to become Northern Ireland’s Deputy First Minister in 2007. He held the role for a decade until he resigned in January shortly after being diagnosed with a rare heart condition.

On the night McGuinness retired, Paisley’s son Ian Junior, a member of the British parliament, said that had it not been for McGuinness’ work, especially with his father, Northern Ireland would not have been in a position to rebuild itself.

McGuinness was active until the last weeks of his life, helping to orchestrat­e one of the biggest political victories for Irish nationalis­m in decades by forcing a snap election in March that deprived unionism of its majority in the regional parliament for the first time.

Colin Parry, whose son was killed by an IRA bomb, was measured in his view of McGuiness’s historical role. “We can never forgive him but we can respect the man he became,” he said.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness outside his party offices in west Belfast, Northern Ireland.
PICTURE: AP Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness outside his party offices in west Belfast, Northern Ireland.

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