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Trimble calls for review of Good Friday accord
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, JULY 29. In a significant development, the moderate
Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) chief, Mr. David Trimble, has called
for a ``substantial'' review of the Good Friday Agreement
effectively throwing his weight behind the party hardliners
opposed to the accord.
His remarks, soon after his return from the U.S., followed a
similar demand by two party hawks, Mr. Jeffrey Donaldson, and Mr.
David Burnside, who announced their withdrawal from the peace
process two days ago saying they did not want to continue to sit
with Sinn Fein in a coalition Government so long as its armed
wing, the IRA, continued to hang on to its weapons.
This is the first time that Mr. Trimble, one of the architects of
the Good Friday Agreement, has publicly opposed it prompting
observers to sound the death knell of the British and Irish
Governments' efforts to save the peace process.
His comments were seen as a ``challenge'' to Mr. Tony Blair and
his Irish counterpart, Mr. Bertie Ahern's plea that there is no
alternative to the Good Friday Agreement.
They have been working on a compromise package to salvage the
three-year-old accord which has been been plunged into a crisis
over de-weaponisation.
Mr. Trimble, who resigned on July 1. as head of the provincial
Government to force the IRA to disarm, said he was not optimistic
about a change in IRA's position.
``This means that we are into Plan B and I think there is going
to be a substantial review of the agreement. I'm not saying that
will definitely happen but there is every possibility we will be
into a review'', he said on Saturday. The Guardian called his
remarks a ``blow'' to the peace efforts.
The Sinn Fein reacted sharply saying this showed Mr. Trimble had
joined the anti-agreement group in his party, nearly half of
which is believed to be opposed to the accord.
Mr. Trimble's new tough line is said to be a result of the
pressure on him from party hardliners who believe that his
moderate position has alienated the UUP from the people.
He was blamed for the party's poor performance in the recent
elections in which the more militant Democratic Unionist Party
(DUP) made substantial gains at UUP's expense.
His bid to buy peace with party hawks has brought him into a
head-on confrontation with Sinn Fein which has made clear that it
would not buckle under pressure. The political tension in
Northern Ireland has heightened after renewed sectarian violence
in North Belfast which saw more clashes for the second day on
Saturday.
Two shooting incidents were reported from the Protestant Ardoyne
district, a chronic flashpoint, and though the violence was on a
much smaller scale than on the previous night the situation
remained tense.
The Northern Ireland Secretary, Dr. John Reid, described the
flare-up as an attempt to destroy the peace process and appealed
to the people not to be misled by such elements.
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