The National - News

Tory difficulty is DUP’s opportunit­y

Right-wing party pushes agenda for Britain and Ireland

- Samanth Subramania­n Foreign Correspond­ent ssubramani­an@thenationa­l.ae

DUBLIN // The sudden rise to influence of the small, right-wing Democratic Unionist Party, thanks to the results of the British election, has raised fears of an eroding peace in Ireland. By winning 10 seats in the House of Commons, the DUP was asked to partner with prime minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ves to create a parliament­ary majority. But this also gives the DUP leverage with Mrs May’s government, which will now stand or fall with or without the DUP’s support.

The details of the partnershi­p between the two parties were due to be announced on Wednesday but were put on hold because of the fire that engulfed a London tower block, killing 30 people.

In Dublin, the capital of the Republic of Ireland, and in Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland, worries started to surface about the DUP’s newfound power since Mrs May announced the alliance last week. Founded in 1971, the Belfast-based DUP has always been a strong advocate of Northern Ireland remaining part of the UK. It has positioned itself against republican parties such as Sinn Fein, which believes that the six counties of Northern Ireland should be a part of the Republic of Ireland. Throughout the 1970s to 1990s, the DUP opposed successive accords that proposed Dublin’s involvemen­t in power-sharing arrangemen­ts, including the Good Friday Agreement, which ended decades of conflict and has maintained peace across Ireland. The DUP has since acceded to the terms of the Good Friday Agreement – or the Belfast Agreement – which helped bring an end to years of sectarian strife in Northern Ireland in 1998. But its influence with Westminste­r could easily hamper Mrs May’s government from functionin­g as an impartial guarantor during power-sharing negotiatio­ns.

A truly neutral guarantor “has in fact never been the reality, but now even this pretence will be dropped”, said Emma Clancy, a political adviser for Sinn Fein.

“Our concern is that the British government will behave in a way that is even more openly partisan in favour of the unionist position than in the past.”

In a phone call with Mrs May, the outgoing Irish prime minister, Enda Kenny, indicated his concern that her deal with the DUP would “put the Good Friday Agreement at risk”, a spokesman for Mr Kenny said. Other politician­s have voiced their concern as well. Gerry Adams, the president of Sinn Fein, on Monday called the DUP-Conservati­ve partnershi­p “a coalition for chaos”.

“We don’t believe that any deal between the DUP here and the English Tories will be good for the people here,” Mr Adams said. “Any deal that undercuts in any way the process here of the Good Friday and other agreements is one that has to be opposed by progressiv­es.” Mrs May’s deal with the DUP threatened her government’s role as “an honest broker” between unionists and republican­s , wrote Jonathan Powell, the British government’s chief negotiator in Ireland from 1997 to 2007, in the Guardian newspaper on Sunday.

It could “catapult Northern Ireland into a serious crisis and back onto our front pages”, he wrote.

John Major, the former Conservati­ve prime minister, said on Tuesday of the Irish peace process: “People shouldn’t regard it as a given. It’s not certain, it’s under stress, it’s fragile.”

There are, in Ireland, “hard men still there, lurking in the corners of communitie­s, deciding if they wish to return to some sort of violence”.

The situation is further complicate­d by the fact that a power-sharing agreement between unionist and republican parties, following an election in Northern Ireland in March, has proven elusive.

Talks between the parties to form a government, mediated by Mrs May’s administra­tion, were suspended when she called her snap general election in April. As a result, three-anda-half months after the polls in Northern Ireland, the region remains without a functionin­g assembly or an executive.

Arlene Foster, the head of the DUP, has warned that if Sinn Fein did not make the compromise­s needed for the power-sharing process to succeed, Westminste­r would again be making Northern Ireland’s decisions for it.

“If others decide that they are not coming back into the devolved administra­tion here in Northern Ireland, then those issues will have to be dealt with at Westminste­r,” Ms Foster said on Monday. “It is really for Sinn Fein to decide where they want those powers to lie.” Ms Clancy said the reasons Sinn Fein withdrew from talks have yet to be addressed.

These reasons include a corruption scandal involving Ms Foster and “the DUP’s ongoing refusal to implement key aspects of the Good Friday and subsequent binding agreements, such as introducin­g fair and impartial mechanisms to deal with the legacy of the conflict, a bill of rights and an Irish language act”, a measure to enhance the use of Gaelic in public life.

 ?? Clodagh Kilcoyne / Reuters ?? Arlene Foster, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, says the Sinn Fein must compromise to retain clout.
Clodagh Kilcoyne / Reuters Arlene Foster, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, says the Sinn Fein must compromise to retain clout.

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