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Mowlam says deal is `hair's breadth away'

Andrew Marshall
Tuesday 16 March 1999 19:02 EST
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MO MOWLAM, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, said yesterday in Washington thatNorthern Ireland was "a hair's breadth away" from a deal that would unblock progress on a new executive for the province.

British officials said that hopes were rising that a deal would be made after talks today in Washington between the leaders of the Northern Ireland political parties and President Bill Clinton. Ms Mowlam, Bertie Ahern, the Irish Prime Minister, David Trimble, theFirst Minister, and Gerry Adams, leader of Sinn Fein, will all be in Washington for the talks.

"We are very far along this road. It would be a tragedy if we didn't keep on walking down it," said Ms Mowlam. "A gesture ... a beginning" was needed to end the stalemate between the nationalists and loyalists over whether Sinn Fein could take its place in the executive before decommissioning began. "Everybody is going to have to move, everybody is going to have to do something," she said.

Mr Trimble said that he hoped President Clinton would ask Mr Adams to begin decommissioning. "The important thing that can be done by people here in Washington is to use what influence they have with those elements in Northern Ireland who have yet to begin their end of implementing the agreement," he said.

Sinn Fein are playing a "long game" he added, saying that he feared that progress on decommissioning might be stretched out for weeks, if not months. He also said he was concerned that the issue of decommissioning might become entangled with the forthcoming report from Chris Patten, the former governor of Hong Kong, on policing in Northern Ireland.

US officials say Mr Clinton will reiterate that all parties must respect the spirit as well as the letter of the Good Friday Agreement, and that Sinn Fein must make some movement.

Seamus Mallon of the SDLP has outlined a formula that would see further British military withdrawals and demilitarisation, efforts to build confidence by identifying the burial sites of some of Northern Ireland's many "disappeared", and a clear commitment to begin disarmament. But the key would be a change of tack from Sinn Fein. "I think there's room in there for Sinn Fein to move," he said.

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