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96uard fheis 2000 dublin november 18-19 3 5 5s is § fo uimh 162 october — deireadh fomhair 2000 rovo 6op(usa$l the queen's university belfast speech by dr martin mansergh northern adviser to three successive heads of the 26-county administration has endorsed the arguments put forward by republicans down the years this is that the cross-border bodies established under the stormont agreement cannot and will not lead to irish independence and an end to british rule in his address on september 30 dr mansergh let the cat out of the bag in dramatic fashion there is no evidence he said let alone inevitability from international experience that limited cross-border co operation necessarily leads to political unification the significance of his remarks can be gauged firstly from his stature as a northern adviser and a secret negotiator with gerry adams as far back as the period in office of charlie haughey in the early 1980s secondly the importance of his speech can be indirectly measured by the fact that the irish news in belfast and the irish times in dublin both omitted any reference to the sentence quoted above from their published versions of his address on monday october 2 this is no mere coincidence given that many of these newspapers readers are drawn from the nationalist community on this island who have been fooled by the provisionals claims that the stormont agreement is a transitional stage towards irish unity and that the cross-border bodies will be the mechanism to achieve a united and free ireland mansergh went on to say that the constitutional stature of northern ireland will not be changed over the heads of the people of northern ireland without their agreement and participation newspaper the arguments were based on practical experience of such cross border bodies in ireland since 1 950 and of european examples the bodies would have no significant function martin manserpn is saving what republicans have said down the years he is endorsing the arguments put forward by republican sinn fein against the stormont agreement in other words the unionist veto initiated in 1921 with partition is still there and operative from 192 1 the stormont parliament had the veto on unity and exercised it from 1922 until the fall of stormont fifty years later in 1972 the veto was transferred by the british to the unionist contrived majority in the six counties which originated in the gerrymander of ireland the sunningdale agreement of 1973 saw the unionist veto accepted by the dublin administration and it was further reinforced by the anglo-irish agreement of 1985 and the stormont agreement in 1998 martin mansergh is saying what republicans have said down the years he is endorsing the arguments put forward by republican sinn fein against the stormont agreement and specifically in president ruairi o bradaigh's address to comhairle uladh on december 12 1999 which was aimed in full at the time bv the london j nde pendent and would be account able to stormont david trimble said after the crucial meeting with dublin and london in december 1998 therefore they cannot grow and develop into an all ireland government as republican sinn fein has said dr mansergh stressed that the cross border co-operation would help to underpin peace and stability in northern ireland in the report of his speech the northern editor of the sunday tribune said mansergh openly cast doubt on one of the articles of faith in the stormont agreement expressed by the provisionals and said that his close association w ith the current process and the thinking behind it added weight to his remarks mansergh s remarks dashed the provisionals hopes and completely undermines their arguments republican sinn fein believes the problem of british rule in ireland must be faced not on the basis of make-believe and wishful thinking but on the basis of • powerless showpieces the cross-border bodies will not hinder the unionist veto which remains intact \ reality the reality is that the stormont agreement is an attempt to restructure and update british rule in ireland and extend its support base from the unionists to a large section of the nationalist population in ireland this can be seen through the acceptance of stormont and administering british rule through it and • the attempts to get young people from nationalist families on both sides of the border to join a new-look ruc to uphold that rule physically these are steps backwards not forwards the alternative is the organisation and mobilisation of irish people at home and abroad based on a truthful analysis of the situation ie the stormont agreement simply updates british rule here and widens its base of support in all of j rciancj * dr martin mansergh
Object Description
| Title | Issue 162, Saoirse : Irish Freedom (October, 2000) |
| Subject |
Dublin (Ireland) -- Newspapers Northern Ireland--Politics and government--Periodicals |
| Headline | Provo hopes dashed |
| Issue Number | 162 |
| Date | October, 2000 |
| Place of Publication | Dublin, Ireland |
| Publisher | Sinn Féin Poblachtach |
| Issue of | Saoirse : Irish Freedom |
| Language | English and Gaelic |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Digital Date | 2006 |
| Digital Publisher | IUPUI University Library |
| Format and Resolution | Full View: 400 dpi jpg 2000 ; Archived: 400 dpi tiff |
| Scanner | Minolta PS 7000 open book scanner |
| Usage | http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright |
| Digital Collection | Saoirse - Irish Freedom Newspaper (http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/irishnews/) |
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