Dáil debates

Wednesday, 9 February 2005

Northern Ireland Issues: Motion (Resumed).

 

8:00 pm

Photo of Joe HigginsJoe Higgins (Dublin West, Socialist Party)

Amendment No. 2 reads as follows:

To delete all words after "Dáil Éireann" and substitute the following:

—believes that events in Northern Ireland since the signing of the Good Friday Agreement show clearly that a resolution cannot be found based on the institutionalisation of sectarian division and on political parties that are based on sectarian division;

—believes that the large majority of the population in Northern Ireland want peace and no resumption of paramilitary attacks;

—demands the continuation of ceasefires by paramilitary organisations but notes the continuation by these organisations on both sides of the community of undemocratic and oppressive methods to maintain control over areas where they are based and calls for an end to these activities;

—has no confidence that the current British or Irish Governments, which are implementing neo-liberal economic policies, have any solution to the underlying social and economic problems which blight in particular catholic and protestant working class communities;

—notes in particular the British Government's policy for further privatisation of public services and the planned introduction in 2006 of water charges for householders;

—believes that a resolution to the problems in Northern Ireland can only be based on a united working class mobilising to resolve the economic, social and political problems that confront society;

—calls for complete demilitarisation;

—calls for an end to all activity by all paramilitaries, loyalist and republican;

—calls for the establishment of genuine policing services that are locally based and under the control of democratically elected policing committees; and

—calls for the building of a mass political party capable of uniting the working class in the struggle for a socialist solution.

I oppose the motion and the amendments by the Government and Sinn Féin which seek to restore what has failed, namely, the institutionalisation of sectarian division for which the institutions of the Good Friday Agreement provide. It beggars belief that anybody can believe that a continuation of these structures, based on sectarian divisions and parties, can advance the situation. It is unbelievable that anyone would think that for a section of the republican movement, which is not a socialist movement, to be in government with an extreme right wing section of unionism is an advance for working class people in Northern Ireland.

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