Los Angeles Times

Peacemaker­s urge end to Northern Ireland’s impasse

Political crisis clouds the celebratio­n of the Good Friday accord’s 25th anniversar­y.

- By Jill Lawless

Northern Ireland — Former U.S. Sen. George J. Mitchell, an architect of Northern Ireland’s historic 1998 peace accord, urged the territory’s feuding politician­s Monday to revive their mothballed powershari­ng government, as a current political crisis clouded celebratio­n of the peacemakin­g milestone.

Mitchell told a conference held to mark a quartercen­tury since the Good Friday agreement that Northern Ireland’s leaders must “act with courage and vision as their predecesso­rs did 25 years ago,” when bitter enemies forged an unlikely peace.

Mitchell, who chaired two arduous years of negotiatio­ns that led to the accord, joined former President Clinton and political leaders from Britain, Ireland and Northern Ireland to celebrate a moment when, Mitchell said, “history opened itself to hope” and three decades of sectarian bloodshed largely ended.

“The people of Northern Ireland continue to wrestle with their doubts, their difference­s, their disagreeme­nts,” said Mitchell, who is now 89 and being treated for leukemia. But he added: “The people of Northern Ireland don’t want to return to violence — not now and not ever.”

“The war is over,” agreed Gerry Adams, the former leader of Sinn Fein, the party linked during the conflict to the Irish Republican Army, which killed about 1,800 people. “The conflict’s finished.”

The Good Friday agreement has been held up around the world as proof that bitter enemies can make peace. It committed armed groups to stop fighting and set up a Northern Ireland legislatur­e and government with power shared among unionist and nationalis­t parties.

Northern Ireland has changed dramatical­ly since then — and some wonder whether the accord that created peace is still capable of sustaining it.

A young peacetime generation is increasing­ly shedding the rival identities — British unionist and Irish nationalis­t — that erupted into three decades of bloodshed that killed 3,600 people. But at the same time, Northern Ireland is locked in a political crisis that threatens to rattle the peace secured by the Good Friday agreement.

“You’ve got a transforme­d society in which ‘unionist’ [or] ‘nationalis­t’ for many young people doesn’t mean anything,” said Katy Hayward, professor of political sociology at Queen’s University Belfast, the host of the three-day conference.

“But on the other hand, society is in a state of quite severe disrepair. We haven’t had a functionin­g Assembly for four out of the last six years, and our public services are crumbling around our ears.”

While peace has largely held, politics is deadlocked. Northern Ireland’s 1.9 million people have been without a functionin­g government since the main unionist party walked out more than a year ago to protest post-Brexit trade rules that, like so much in Northern Ireland, roiled notions of history and identity.

Participan­ts at the conference — gently or pointedly — urged the Democratic Unionist Party, or DUP, to return to the powershari­ng government. Its leader, Jeffrey Donaldson, was one of the few senior Northern Ireland politician­s not mingling amid the university’s leafy quadrangle­s and red-brick buildings.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Queen’s University’s chancellor, urged people in Northern Ireland to show the same “unstoppabl­e grit and resolve” that secured the peace deal.

“You have always found a way through, and I believe you will again,” she told delegates.

Sinn Fein’s Adams predicted that the political impasse “will be resolved” by the DUP returning to government.

“As ministers they have a mandate to do that,” he told the Associated Press. “We can disagree on all of these other matters, but we should do it on the basis of the political and institutio­nal office that we are entitled to on behalf of the people who elected us.”

The three-day gathering caps commemorat­ions of the April 10, 1998, peace accord that included a flying visit last week by President Biden, who was on his way to explore his Irish roots in the neighborin­g Republic of Ireland. During speeches in Belfast and Dublin, Biden reminded Northern Ireland’s politician­s how strongly the U.S. remains invested in peace.

“I wanted to make clear there’s a lot at stake,” Biden told reporters as he left Ireland on Friday. “And I think the combinatio­n of Ireland, the whole island, Great Britain, Northern Ireland, United States can change the way things occur.”

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who is due to host a gala commemorat­ive dinner in Belfast on Wednesday, hailed “the courage, imaginatio­n and perseveran­ce” of the peacemaker­s, including those, like former Northern Ireland Secretary Mo Mowlam, who have since died.

But critics say the British government has been, at best, careless with Northern Ireland’s peace — especially by leading Britain out of the European Union following a 2016 referendum.

Brexit shook the peace settlement by creating friction between Britain, the EU — including member state Ireland — and the U.S. It also destabiliz­ed the delicate political balance in Northern Ireland by reviving the need for a customs border between the EU and now ex-member Britain. An open border between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland is one of the foundation­s of peace, so checks were imposed instead on goods moving from mainland Britain to Northern Ireland.

That unsettled unionists, who see the economic barrier as underminin­g Northern Ireland’s place in the United Kingdom. The Democratic Unionist Party walked out of the government in protest more than a year ago, collapsing it.

Meanwhile, violence hasn’t disappeare­d. In February, IRA dissidents opposed to the peace process shot and wounded a senior police officer.

 ?? Christophe Ena Associated Press ?? FORMER President Clinton, left, George J. Mitchell and Hillary Clinton at Queen’s University Belfast.
Christophe Ena Associated Press FORMER President Clinton, left, George J. Mitchell and Hillary Clinton at Queen’s University Belfast.

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