SF insists Executive be restored

Sinn Féin's chief negotiator Martin McGuinness has said that Sinn Féin is not willing to take part in the Northern Ireland Assembly…

Sinn Féin's chief negotiator Martin McGuinness has said that Sinn Féin is not willing to take part in the Northern Ireland Assembly if there is no prospect of having an Executive up and running by the summer.

Speaking to journalists in Dublin yesterday, ahead of a meeting with Taoiseach Bertie Ahern and Government Ministers on Thursday, he said the two governments should scrap the Assembly in the summer if the DUP were still refusing to agree to the election of the first and deputy first ministers and the Executive.

Mr Ahern is expected to meet British prime minister Tony Blair in Armagh on April 6th when they will publish the British and Irish governments plans to reactivate the Assembly.

These current proposals would set a time limit of the autumn for an agreement to re-establish the Northern Ireland Executive, after which the Assembly would be scrapped.

READ MORE

Yesterday Mr McGuinness reiterated Sinn Féin's opposition to such a move in strong terms, saying he did not believe "there can be any halfway house between a DUP 'no' position in the summer and a DUP 'no' position in the autumn".

"The reality is that the DUP is now isolated in some never-never land and the sooner the governments effectively tell, not just the DUP but everybody else that the only way forward is the full implementation of the Good Friday Agreement, the better," he said.

His party's position was for the governments to reconvene the Assembly before the summer, and "make the effort to elect the first minister and the deputy first minister and the Executive".

"If the DUP are not prepared to play their part in all of that, then the two governments should just get on with it. The Assembly should effectively be abolished, the wages should be stopped and the two governments should press on with the all Ireland agenda." He said this was the only sensible option.

"Let Ian Paisley explain that to the unionist people because we know there are huge numbers of unionists in Northern Ireland who want to see these institutions up as quickly as possible."

He said Sinn Féin was prepared to examine the proposals the governments would make next week, but indicated that if they were similar to the proposals of a few weeks ago for the establishment of a shadow Executive, they would be rejected.

"We will look at whatever the governments have put forward but there's no sort of sensible reason for coming forward with a repackaged proposal from the one that you saw and that's been rejected a few weeks ago. So we're not for a shadow Assembly simply because it's not going to work," said Mr McGuinness.

Yesterday members of the SDLP, who were meeting Government officials in Dublin to discuss the Assembly, reiterated their party's opposition to an Assembly with no Executive.

SDLP MLA Alex Attwood said Sinn Féin would also have to bear part of the responsibility if the Assembly collapses over the party's failure to deal with the policing issue and the ongoing issues relating to alleged criminality involving senior republican figures.