RSS
News



New crisis threatens peace in Northern Ireland

Dissident IRA groups are desperate to derail the power-sharing government



Bookmark and Share

Fuelling the crisis: Dissident groups intent on derailing North peace process
Dissident IRA groups are desperate to derail the powersharing government

There is a deep sense of foreboding about the future of Northern Ireland as the new economic envoy from the U.S., Declan Kelly, ends his first round of meetings with the leaders of the government there.

Overnight violence in Lurgan where three men were jailed Thursday for dissident IRA activities was just the latest in a series of violent incidents that have undermined the work of the peace process.

Last week a 600 lb bomb was discovered near the Irish border with the Republic while attempts to kill an off-duty policeman in Derry failed.

Dissident IRA groups are desperate to derail the power-sharing government and know they need to pull off a spectacular bombing if they are to do so. Security experts say there have been many close calls and it may only be a matter of time.

Though the rest of the world has looked away from Northern Ireland thinking the problem solved the reality remains that there are still miles to go before the peace process is finally secure.

Dissident threats and a looming political crisis for unionism are the major shadows hanging over more political progress.

But perhaps even more serious is a developing political stalemate brought about by a scenario that could see Sinn Fein take over as the largest party in Northern Ireland in 2011.

The Assembly elections are set for spring of that year with Sinn Fein holding a huge advantage over the SDLP in the nationalist vote. The unionist vote is far more evenly split.

In that scenario the extraordinary vista of a Sinn Fein First Minister, essentially prime minister of Northern Ireland emerges.

The peace accords are clear that the party receiving the largest vote elects the First Minster. Although the nationalist vote is smaller by a 55-45 ratio, the fact that Sinn Fein will overwhelmingly win it means the party may well have enough votes to take the top job in Northern Ireland politics.

That has set the cat among the pigeons for the Democratic Unionist Party leader Peter Robinson who knows well that he will have great difficulty sustaining power if Sinn Fein end ups in the top seat.

Unionists will have to swallow hard to accept a Sinn Fein leader as top dog in Northern Ireland  - the state they ran in a dictatorial manner for over 50 years.

Robinson has difficulties on his right flank from renegade unionist hardliner Jim McAlister whose splinter party, Traditional Unionist Values, will definitely take significant votes.



Be the first to make a comment.

It may take several minutes for your comment to appear.


Click to learn more from DiscoverIreland.com.
IrishCentral Mobile QR code


Connect to IrishCentral with your Facebook account


or sign-in directly

Welcome to IrishCentral!
Please provide the following information in order to create your account

Username:
E-Mail Address:
Password:
Confirm Password:
I agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy


Welcome to IrishCentral!
All we need is the following information and you will be part of the #1 Irish community in the US

E-Mail Address:
First select a unique username:
Username:
Now choose a password:
Password:
Confirm Password:
I agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
Thank you!

Just one more step and you will be part of the largest Irish community in America! Tell us a little more about you to start enjoying all the features of IrishCentral.

Additional Information:

First Name:
Last Name:
Date of Birth:
Zip:
Gender: Male  Female 
Country:

Degree of Irishness:
Household Income:
Level of Education:

Subscribe to our newsletters:

The Best of IrishCentral - Daily Newsletter
Special Offers from our sponsors

or
Skip

You can edit your information at any time, just go to "my account" when you're logged in.

Log into IrishCentral with your Facebook account


or sign-in directly

E-Mail:
Password:
 Remember me Forgot my password