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International
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Trimble keeps party mantle for now
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, JUNE 23. Shaken by three days of sectarian rioting,
political parties in Northern Ireland began to pick up the pieces
today amid reports that the provincial Assembly might be
suspended as a last resort to save the peace process. Prospects
of a breakthrough, however, remained bleak with none of the major
players inclined to make concessions.
Strong anti-republican sentiment marked a meeting of the Ulster
Unionist Party (UUP) which leads Northern Ireland's power-sharing
administration with Sinn Fein. While the party chief, Mr. David
Trimble survived an expected leadership challenge, he remained
under pressure from his hardline colleagues to take a tougher
line on arms decommissioning by IRA, the paramilitary wing of
Sinn Fein. The message was unmistakable - he must either get the
IRA to start decommissioning or quit the administration.
The riot-hit areas of Belfast, meanwhile, were quiet but tension
remained high and in north Belfast, where the trouble had
originated, Protestants again blocked the main path to a Catholic
primary school forcing children to take an alternative route. It
was outside this school that violence had first erupted on
Tuesday after a clash between Protestant and Catholic youths.
Security in Belfast has been increased as the police brace
themselves for the dreaded marching season. Tension invariably
rises during this period as Orangemen insist on marching through
Catholic areas, often leading to clashes. The Times reported
today that there were fears of violence on a bigger scale this
year if Orangemen were not allowed to march down the Garvaghy
Road in Portadown on July 8.
Political negotiations conducted by the Northern Ireland
Secretary, Dr. John Reid and the Irish Foreign Minister, Mr.
Brian Cowen at Hillsborough Castle, outside Belfast, on Friday
failed to get an agreement on the key issues holding up progress
on the Good Friday Agreement - decommissioning and police
reforms. While Unionists insisted that the peace process could
not move ahead as long as the IRA continued to hold weapons, the
Sinn Fein said the British Government must first honour its
pledge to reduce its military presence in Northern Ireland and
recast the police to the satisfaction of the Catholic community.
``We are, under no circumstances, going to accept that the
responsibility is ours and ours alone,'' a Sinn Fein leader said.
Despite official denials, speculation that the Assembly could be
suspended persisted and The Guardian quoted unnamed sources as
saying that ``some very hard decisions'' may have to be taken,
including a review of the Good Friday Agreement. A decision was
expected before July 1, the deadline set by Mr. Trimble to quit
as head of the governing coalition if the IRA does not start
destroying its weapons by then. With the IRA refusing to buckle
under the pressure of ``ultimatums'', Mr. Trimble's resignation
is widely seen to be a certainty. The British Government was
reported to be anxious to pre-empt the political crisis that
might follow Mr. Trimble's resignation; and hence the talk of
suspending the Assembly before July 1.
``Suspension is a distinct possibility,'' a UUP source told a
newspaper confirming the hardline Democratic Unionist Party
chief, Rev. Ian Paisley's impression after a meeting with the
Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair on Thursday.
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