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IRA offer withdrawn

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  • 03-02-2005 12:23am
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 39


    >>>>>> Flash: IRA offer withdrawn


    The following is the full text of a statement issued tonight by
    the Provisional IRA


    In August 1994, the leadership of Oglaigh na hEireann announced
    a complete cessation of all military operations. We did so to
    enhance the democratic peace process and underline our
    definitive commitment to its success.

    That cessation ended in February 1996 because the British
    Government acted in bad faith when the then British Prime
    Minister John Major and Unionist leaders squandered that
    unprecedented opportunity to resolve the conflict.

    However, we remained ready to engage positively and in July 1997
    we reinstated the cessation on the same basis as before.
    Subsequently, we honoured the terms of our cessation with
    discipline and honesty, despite numerous attempts to
    misrepresent those terms by others.

    Since then - over a period of almost eight years - our
    leadership took a succession of significant and ambitious
    initiatives designed to develop or save the peace process. Those
    included:

    ** Engaging with the Independent International Commission on
    Decommissioning;

    ** Agreeing that independent inspectors could inspect the contents
    of a number of IRA dumps, allowing regular re-inspections to
    ensure that the weapons remained secure and the reporting of
    what they had done both publicly and to the IICD;

    ** Setting out a clear context for dealing definitively with the
    issue of arms;

    ** Acknowledging past mistakes, hurt and pain the IRA has caused
    to others and extending our sincere apologies and condolences
    for the deaths and injuries of non-combatants caused by us;

    ** Agreeing a scheme with the IICD to put arms completely and
    verifiably beyond use;

    ** Implementing this scheme to save the peace process by putting
    three separate tranches of weapons beyond use on:

    *** - 23 October 2001

    *** - 11 April 2002

    **** - 21 October 2003; and

    ** Seeking to directly and publicly address unionist concerns.


    In 2004 our leadership was prepared to speedily resolve the
    issue of arms, by Christmas if possible, and to invite two
    independent witnesses, from the Protestant and Catholic
    churches, to testify to this. In the context of a comprehensive
    agreement we were also prepared to move into a new mode and to
    instruct our Volunteers that there could be no involvement
    whatsoever in activities which might endanger that agreement.

    These significant and substantive initiatives were our
    contributions to the peace process. Others, however, did not
    share that agenda. Instead, they demanded the humiliation of the
    IRA.

    Our initiatives have been attacked, devalued and dismissed by
    pro-unionist and anti-republican elements, including the British
    Government. The Irish Government have lent themselves to this.
    Commitments have been broken or withdrawn. The progress and
    change promised on political, social, economic and cultural
    matters, as well as on demilitarisation, prisoners, equality and
    policing and justice, has not materialised to the extent
    required, or promised.

    British forces, including the PSNI, remain actively engaged in
    both covert and overt operations, including raids on
    republicans' homes.

    We are also acutely aware of the dangerous instability within
    militant unionism, much of it fostered by British military
    intelligence agencies. The British/loyalist apparatus for
    collusion remains intact.

    The political institutions have been suspended for years now and
    there is an ongoing political impasse.

    At this time it appears that the two governments are intent on
    changing the basis of the peace process. They claim that 'the
    obstacle now to a lasting and durable settlement... is the
    continuing paramilitary and criminal activity of the IRA'.

    We reject this. It also belies the fact that a possible
    agreement last December was squandered by both governments
    pandering to rejectionist unionism instead of upholding their
    own commitments and honouring their own obligations.

    We do not intend to remain quiescent within this unacceptable
    and unstable situation. It has tried our patience to the limit.
    Consequently, on reassessment of our position and in response to
    the governments and others withdrawing their commitments;

    ** We are taking all our proposals off the table.

    ** It is our intention to closely monitor ongoing developments and
    to protect to the best of our ability the rights of republicans
    and our support base.

    The IRA has demonstrated our commitment to the peace process
    again and again. We want it to succeed. We have played a key
    role in achieving the progress achieved so far. We are prepared,
    as part of a genuine and collective effort, to do so again, if
    and when the conditions are created for this.

    But peace cannot be built on ultimatums, false and malicious
    accusations or bad faith. Progress will not be sustained by the
    reinstatment of Thatcherite criminalisation strategies, which
    our ten comrades died defeating on hunger strike in 1981. We
    will not betray the courage of the hunger strikers either by
    tolerating criminality within our own ranks or false allegations
    of criminality against our organisation by petty politicians
    motivated by selfish interests, instead of the national need for
    a successful conclusion to the peace process.

    Finally, we thank all those who have supported us through
    decades of struggle. We freely acknowledge our responsibility to
    enhance genuine efforts to build peace and justice. We reiterate
    our commitment to achieving Irish independence and our other
    republican objectives. We are determined that these objectives
    will be secured.

    P O'Neill
    Irish Republican Publicity Bureau
    Dublin



    In an initial response to Wednesday night's IRA statement, Sinn
    Fein President Gerry Adams said:

    "The IRA statement is obviously a direct consequence of the
    retrograde stance of the two governments. It is evidence of a
    deepening crisis and I regret that very much.

    "The two governments have opted for confrontation. They are
    engaging in the sterile politics of the blame game without any
    regard for the consequences. This negative approach has
    effectively scuttled the enormous work done in persuading the
    IRA to undertake the unprecedented initiatives which they
    publicly outlined in December.

    "All of this good work has now been undermined."


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 544 ✭✭✭pauldeehan


    It is incredibly frustrating that we came so close this time, only for everything to collapse as usual. At one point it really seemed like it would work.

    But then the DUP had to go and demand the humilation of the IRA. Ian Paisley Jr and Daddy had to do that speech. They knew that the nationalists wouldn't submit to that demand, it was deliberate sabotage.

    The unionists are the ones with the most to lose from the agreement and that's why they've always impeded it.

    And now everyone's pulling out. None of them are going to back down or lose face. And of course the real loser here is the people of Northern Ireland, Protestant and Catholic.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,126 ✭✭✭][cEMAN**


    I don't honestly think we're ready yet. Too many in the old school of hate and prejudice.

    I'd love to say it's human nature, but on the most part it's not - it's conditioning.

    Maybe in another couple of generations time, if we can manage to get the conditioning out of the system. Part of that will mean that the politicians will have to quiet down for a while. Sad to say, but the people who 'claim' they're trying to help us, are the ones inciting violence due to knee jerk reactions.

    "Who does he think he is? He's one of them and trying to make out that i'm a criminal blah blah".

    There have been events in the last century which have sparked a call to arms on both sides - we just need to realise we're sitting on a powder keg, and stop playing with the matches to cause the spark. Once we can move on, we'll be ok.


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