The Star Late Edition

Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams urges calm after release

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BELFAST: Northern Ireland police released Gerry Adams from custody yesterday and the Sinn Fein leader sought to calm fears that his four-day detention could destabilis­e the British province by pledging his support to the peace process.

Police arrested Adams on Wednesday over the 1972 murder of Jean McConville, a killing he repeated that he was “innocent of any part” in. His detention had raised tension among Northern Ireland’s powershari­ng government and its fragile peace.

After Sinn Fein pointed the finger at “dark forces” in the police service and their Protestant partners in the government accused it of a “thuggish attempt” at blackmail, a calm Adams toned down the rhetoric and said he supported the police.

“My resolve remains as strong as ever, that is to build the peace, not to let this put us off. It’s our future. The past is the past,” Adams told a news conference.

“The old guard which is against change, whether it is in the Police Service of Northern Ireland leadership, within elements of Unionism or the far fringes of self-proclaimed, pseudo-republican­s, they can’t win. I’m an Irish republican. I want to live in a peaceful Ireland. I’ve never dissociate­d myself from the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and I never will, but I am glad that I and others have created a peaceful and democratic way forward for everyone. The IRA is gone, finished.”

Adams’s arrest over the McConville killing was among the most significan­t in Northern Ireland since a 1998 peace deal ended decades of tit-for-tat killings by Irish Catholic nationalis­ts and mostly Protestant pro-British loyalists. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: FRANK CAPRIO / AP ?? BEFORE THE FALL: Performers at an aerial hair-hanging stunt at the US’s Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus.
PICTURE: FRANK CAPRIO / AP BEFORE THE FALL: Performers at an aerial hair-hanging stunt at the US’s Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus.

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