international papers
columns
- Fight Club
The international press smells blood in the Democratic primaries.
Susan Daniels
posted March 5, 2008 - American Idols, International Edition
Foreign press fails to make fun of U.S. election system shocker!
Susan Daniels
posted Feb. 6, 2008 - Trouble in Paradise
The international press watches Fiji's slow-motion coup.
Susan Daniels
posted Dec. 6, 2006 - Next!
The international press realizes it won't have Bush to kick around for much longer.
June Thomas
posted Nov. 9, 2006 - Hellbollah
What's in the Middle East's English-language papers.
Zuzanna Kobrzynski
posted July 14, 2006 - Search for more international papers articles
- Subscribe to the international papers RSS feed
- View our complete international papers archive
Stormont on Ice
By June ThomasPosted Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2002, at 6:04 PM ET
Rather than permit a meltdown in the Northern Ireland assembly, the Blair government temporarily reinstated direct rule of Northern Ireland from London at midnight Tuesday. The British Northern Ireland secretary ordered the suspension of the devolved Belfast parliament to pre-empt a walkout by First Minister David Trimble. Trimble and other unionist members had threatened to leave the Stormont parliament after the discovery earlier this month of an alleged IRA spy ring, in which republican operatives are said to have systematically copied sensitive government information, including the names and addresses of prison officers. The unionists treated the espionage allegations as the last straw, saying they had lost faith in Sinn Fein's renunciation of violence. Trimble refused to serve in a Cabinet with Sinn Fein unless the IRA completely disbands. In a joint statement, the British and Irish premiers warned republicans that they must choose between violence and democracy. They said, "The time has come for people clearly to choose one track or the other. It is now essential that the concerns around the commitment to exclusively democratic and non-violent means are removed."
In Dublin, the Irish Independent was not entirely pessimistic about the latest turn of events. It said "mothballing" the assembly kept the Good Friday Agreement alive, albeit in a state of suspended animation: "[T]he peace process itself is still going along, battered and imperfect but still saving lives." Politicians were hopeful that "some time next Spring the freeze-dried executive can be dug out of the freezer and, as it were, microwaved back into life." The Belfast Telegraph agreed that while suspension of the Northern Ireland Assembly "was never going to be a popular option … pushing the pause button remains infinitely preferable to the alternative of allowing the Stormont institutions to implode." The devolved parliament has been a huge step forward, the paper said, "For the first time in Northern Ireland's history, unionists and republicans have been debating face to face across the floor of an elected assembly." The Scotsman concurred: "The real losers are the tens of thousands of ordinary people in Northern Ireland for whom devolution was making a difference."
There was a general consensus that the onus is now on the republican side. The Belfast Telegraph declared: "Sinn Fein may be tempted to sit back, thinking that its electoral mandate will compel others to deal with it, IRA or no IRA. Whatever votes it amasses, however, it will find no one to deal with, so long as the connection with paramilitarism remains." In Belfast, the unionist News Letter said the suspension "amounts to a vote of no confidence in Sinn Fein's political integrity." Its editorial noted: "Today, the IRA is still armed, and dangerous. It still possesses an illegal military arsenal which makes it the envy of most other terrorist organisations. It has never said its war is over." Acknowledging that loyalist paramilitaries also still operate, the News Letter said the difference is that "they do not help to govern this country." If Sinn Fein and the IRA took measures to build trust, "We would then see just how committed unionists are to a genuinely inclusive and democratic settlement."
On the republican side, An Phoblacht dismissed the maneuverings as "a very British coup." It suggested the spy ring allegations were a front that presented anti-Good Friday Agreement unionists with an excuse to threaten a walkout: "Trimble's display of moral indignation at being required to work with republicans was no more than a fig leaf to cover a sectarian agenda that harked back to the Orange state." The paper's editorial said, "Tony Blair must rein in the securocrats who have sought to return to the certainties of conflict. … But most importantly, he must show the rejectionist unionists that there is no alternative to the Good Friday Agreement."
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
Health & Science
Bristol's 17. Why Should Her Mom Get To Decide the Fate of Her Pregnancy?
Arts & Life
The Deep-
Fried Thrills of HBO's Southern Gothic Vampire Show
News & Politics
POW McCain Refused Release. Why Didn't His Captors Just Kick Him Out?
Business & Tech
Want To Save the Planet? Buy a Cover for Your Pool.
- Today's Headlines
- [audio] Astronomer Discovers Black Hole At Center Of Own Marriage
Sun, 07 Sep 2008 01:00:14 -0400 - No One On SWAT Team Wants To Wait In Ventilation Duct With Howard
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 09:00:53 -0400 - [audio] Homicidal Surgeon General May Be Hazardous To Your Health
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 01:00:43 -0400 - » More from the Onion
The New American FamilyAndrew J. Cherlin | The picture-
perfect family? These days, There's no such thing. | Q&A: Mon., 3 p.m.
- Today's Headlines
- Sarah Palin: An Apostle of Alaska
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 21:12:32 GMT - Rethinking the War on Cancer
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 17:55:51 GMT - The Taliban's No. 2 cash source: ransom kidnapping
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 18:01:39 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Bye-Bye, Boomers
Fri, 5 September 2008 16:44:27 GMT - Living Down to Expectations
Thu, 4 September 2008 21:11:52 GMT - Busted Brand
Thu, 4 September 2008 18:58:59 GMT - » More from The Root

international papers





