Stormont might not collapse but paramilitaries continue to disfigure Northern Ireland
The devolved institutions in Northern Ireland are supposedly ‘teetering on the brink’ of collapse yet again. After repeated failures to agree a balanced budget or implement welfare reform created months of uncertainty, the Executive’s future is now in doubt because the PSNI believes members of the IRA were involved in murdering a republican hit man. Despite its apparent seriousness, this particular predicament is unlikely to bring the shaky edifice at Stormont crashing down. The IRA was supposed to have disbanded its military ‘structures’ and decommissioned its entire arsenal of weapons back in 2005. It was on the basis of this understanding that power-sharing resumed in 2007 and the DUP entered government with Sinn Féin. From the outset it was a fairly flimsy pretext. Less than a year after John de Chastelain, the retired Canadian general, oversaw decommissioning, the Independent Monitoring Commission reported that the IRA retaine...
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“I know that there is an increasing emphasis on turning the Twelfth into a festival which everyone can enjoy and there is no harm in that. It is important to remember it is a celebration. It is also important to remember, however, what it celebrates.”
“The Twelfth is a celebration of civil and religious freedom and of the British constitution which has given our freedom under the law, and our rights as citizens. The whole fabric of our society - our political rights, our financial system, our individual freedom – all developed out of the constitutional settlement of 1688-1690 which it celebrates. We owe the creators of the Revolution settlement a lot. This country would have been a very different place without the stand they took against arbitrary power.”
“People should also remember that the Twelfth is about civil and religious liberty, and about the freedom of people to express their beliefs and views. It is not about domination or suppression of other people’s views. We should be proud that in this part of the United Kingdom we celebrate such a worthwhile set of ideas and principles.”
“So let it be an Orangefest by all means but let us also remember the serious messages it conveys about personal liberty and freedom. These freedoms and liberties are so much under threat these days from an over-powerful government machine and control freakery that we would do well to remember that the core message of the Twelfth is about freedom, liberty, human rights and human dignity.”