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for cultural, economic and social relations
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Speech by David Trimble MP to the Annual Conference of the Irish Association at The Glenview Hotel, Glen Of The Downs, Co Wicklow, on Friday, 20th November 1998 at 2000hrs I am delighted to have this opportunity to speak to the Irish Association
in Co Wicklow, surely one of the most beautiful parts of this island -
outside Ulster, of course. It is also one of the most religiously mixed
areas outside Ulster, the Roman Catholic and Anglican communities living
side by side in harmony. I understand there are even Orangemen here! I'm
not sure, however, about the prevalence of Presbyterians. It is a particular privilege to address you on the 60th anniversary of the Association's foundation. I admire its work, born as it was very much in the Northern unionist community. Through difficult years the Association has kept open channels of communication and has made a serious contribution to the establishment of better relations between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland, between the two parts of this island, and between Britain and Ireland. It is a record of quiet achievement of which you can be justly proud.
Portadown has until relatively recently been a town with good community relations. The only way forward if they are to be restored is for the intransigence of the leaders on the Garvaghy Road to end and for the give and take that previously existed to be restored.
While the focus was very much on remembrance, the significance of the ceremony at Messines in terms of reconciliation on this island was plain to see. For too long everyone on this island has underplayed the contribution of men from here to the war effort, not only in the 1914-18 war but in the Second World War as well. I salute the part played in healing the divisions between those whose families fought with the 36th (Ulster) Division and those in the 16th (Irish) Division by HM The Queen and, in no small part, by President McAleese who has built on the example of President Robinson in a remarkable way.
"For future time the North and the South have got to live together as neighbours and the prosperity of Northern Ireland does undoubtedly affect the prosperity of Southern Ireland and a peaceful and prosperous Southern Ireland reflects on the North" "Therefore, a man is short-sighted indeed and no patriot to his country who would see one portion standing out prosperous, rich, happy and content if, on the other side, he was to see despondency, poverty and going down the hill instead of going up. So it is for the Government of the South and the Government of the North to turn their hands rather from the matters which have divided them in the past to concentrate on the matters which affect the welfare of the people in their own area with a view that the whole of Ireland, and not one part of it alone, may be prosperous."
"In the South they boasted of a Catholic State. They still boast of Southern Ireland being a Catholic State. All I boast of is that we are a Protestant Parliament and a Protestant State." I have spoken more recently of a pluralist parliament for a pluralist people. That is the offer the Agreement makes to all of us. Anyone who wishes to take up that offer in good faith will find me a willing partner. The main concentration must be on economic and social issues and on healing the deep wounds and divisions of the last 30 years. Developments in Northern Ireland can be facilitated by developments on the rest of island. Mainstream unionism recognises that the South has changed. Not only has the Republic itself evolved in a gradually more pluralist direction but, above all, the Irish Government has stopped asking the British Government to act as a persuader for Irish unity. This request was in the rhetoric of not only De Valera but Sean Lemass, Jack Lynch and Charles Haughey, too. To Albert Reynolds great credit, he formally abandoned the notion in 1993 and John Bruton and Bertie Ahern have built on this with credibility. And I want here to acknowledge the crucial role of Bertie Ahern in this year's achievements.
At the same time, the potential for cooperation between the departments and in the business, voluntary and community sectors is considerable. In this regard, I particularly mention the potential for tourism. The last 30 years have impacted negatively worldwide not only for Northern Ireland but for the Republic too. The large hotel chains have not been slow to realise the benefits of the new situation. The market is a much more responsive instrument than government and executive agencies have played no part in this development. I warn against those who seek to rewrite history, who see history rolling inexorably in one direction. It never has done, nor will attempts to nudge it succeed. Such attempts in the past have proved disastrous and positively frustrated useful mutual gains. That is a lesson which must be learned if sterility is not again to inform North/South relations. Is it not better to say: "This area has proven potential, let us see how we can build upon it," rather than, "This was on the agenda in 1965 and 1973 and the situation now demands more"' Perhaps there were sound economic reasons why those schemes were not successful rather than political malevolence at work.
In future, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will have distinct political personalities of their own. We all hope that the move towards devolution across the UK will lead to a new spirit of co-operation and friendship between the different component parts of these islands. I am intrigued to hear Bertie Ahern say that he believes the British-Irish Council may become in time a loose confederation, fully respecting sovereignty of course, like the Nordic Council. We cannot be prescriptive. But once the new Parliament in Scotland and the Assembly in Wales are in place, the value of the British-Irish Council should not be under-estimated.
Unionists can sometimes act defensively. We can be inclined to see ourselves as inhabiting an embattled enclave in these islands. Certainly the experience of the last 30 years has encouraged and reinforced that attitude. But there is another, more important side to unionism: the belief that all the different people of these two islands - English, Welsh, Scottish and from our own island too - share far more than divides us; a belief that there is as much value in continued and various diversity as their is in mutual conformity; a belief that all will gain from being freely associated together within a wider union. They are inclusive beliefs not unique to our part of the island of Ireland. We mean no ill will towards this State when we, who are unionists, say that the Union is in the best interests of all the people, politically, culturally, socially and, in no small part, economically.
I was pleased to be able to endorse the package of legal measures announced by Bertie Ahern earlier this year following the Omagh atrocity. I understand the concerns some have about legislating in response to outrage, but the new legislation brought the law on to a comparable plane, North and South. At the same time as seeking to deter acts of terrorism, the new climate has allowed cautious movement to decrease the visible security presence and the routine inconvenience it can involve. Those travelling from Northern Ireland will have noticed the total removal of the Cloghogue checkpoint outside Newry and the Garda checkpoint at Drumadd. But, caution must be the watchword. Our aspiration to a completely peaceful future must not cloud our judgement. Several terrorist splinter groups are openly not observing ceasefires. The ceasefires in place are not nearly as comprehensive as we would hope. Not only do loyalists and republicans indulge nightly in fascist thuggery directed against their own communities - at a higher rate than at any time since the Agreement - but other indications are not encouraging for the immediate future.
If anyone in the Republican Movement still holds to the notion that a better deal is on offer if they collapse the Assembly, they must be disabused of it. I said on the steps of Castle Buildings on Good Friday that it was time for the Republican Movement to announce its 'squalid, dirty little war' was over. We are still waiting for them to take that opportunity. Let me be quite plain: those who say you sleep sounder at night knowing there is a pike in the thatch are wrong. You won't in fact sleep soundly with it on your conscience and how the heck do you think your neighbours will sleep? The Republican Movement claims that there is no requirement to decommission even within the two year time span. That position is untenable in terms of the Agreement. Moreover it is intolerable to us and, to both the British and Irish Governments. There can be no progress towards an executive role for Sinn Fein while they maintain their "No, Nothing, Never" policy. The Agreement is explicit on this. In the declaration of support on the very first page, the parties to the Agreement reaffirmed their "total and absolute commitment to exclusively democratic and peaceful means of resolving differences on political issues, and our opposition to any use or threat of force by others for any political purpose, whether in regard to this agreement or otherwise." This requirement is repeated three times in Strand One and, in paragraph 25 is linked to exclusion or removal from office. That paragraph is then explicitly cross-referenced to decommissioning. Could anything be clearer? So long as no start has been made towards the total decommissioning of all the terrorist arsenals a constant, an implied threat remains. A threat made explicit when Martin McGuinness wrote recently in the Irish Times that the fact that the guns were not now in use was of immense significance. 'Not now' were his very words, words laden with menace. Consider also the way Donegal Celtic players were intimidated from playing a football match. These are the methods the Republican Movement is still prepared to use. There was a secret ballot. It did not go Sinn Fein's way. Then the hard men were deployed. Is this to be the future? Of course not! I sometimes wonder whether Sinn Fein's leadership have read the Agreement, or, if they have understood and internalised its contents. Let me give an example. Only a few weeks ago, Gerry Adams called for the British Government to "look beyond current policy and encourage new thinking leading to a change in that policy. The aim of democratic Irish opinion, democratic opinion in Britain and internationally must be to seek a change in British policy of one of upholding the Union to one of ending the Union." Is Gerry Adams talking about the same Agreement as the rest of us? Did he overlook Page 2 of the Agreement on constitutional issues where it speaks of "the legitimacy of whatever choice is freely exercised by a majority of the people of Northern Ireland with regard to its status, whether they prefer to continue to support the Union with Great Britain or a sovereign united Ireland"? TOWARDS A NEW STABILITY It has been necessary for me to dwell on these matters for the last few minutes. It needed to be said. But do not get the wrong impression. We are not pursuing an exclusionist strategy. With regard to Sinn Fein, as I said at the first meeting of the Assembly, and I was looking directly at them when I said it, we have never said that people with a past do not have a future. I also said that in the Assembly there are a lot of people who have done terrible things in the past and they are not all in one corner of the chamber. We are open to new relationships, changed relationships, and it is clear that Ulster Unionists are ready to embrace new relationships within Northern Ireland so long as it is done with integrity. Some other unionist parties are not prepared to do so yet. They protest too much their adherence to the purity of their policies. But we know them well. A sense of humour would not go amiss; nor would an ability to see themselves as others see them.
We have a clear choice. There is way marked out for our island. It contains the potential for unparalleled prosperity, peace and justice for all. There is another way. It was described by Oscar Wilde in The Ballad of Reading Gaol. It described the experience of many over the last 30 years: "Something was dead in all of us/ And what was dead was Hope". In 1998, we rekindled Hope. In 1999, we will deliver on it. top of page |