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Monday, 6 March, 2000, 13:25 GMT
Paramilitary peace pact proposed
![]() INLA's politcal wing proposing peace pact with loyalists
The political wing of the republican Irish National Liberation Army has said it is working on a non-aggression pact with loyalist paramilitaries in Northern Ireland.
Paul Little from the IRSP said his party had taken "a long hard look at the (peace) process" and concluded that something else was needed other than the Good Friday Agreement signed by the province's main political parties. He said the IRSP was opposed to that agreement which he said has limited political dialogue and acted as a "political straitjacket" on the peace process. "It has taken communities, especially working class communities, up to the brink and threatening conflict again," Mr Little told BBC Radio Ulster. "It is raising expectations and dashing them again and we think there needs to be a long hard look at this." 'Working class victims' But he said that his party believed that the referendums endorsing the agreement north and south were votes showing that ordinary working class people wanted peace.
"It is our view that the majority of the people who either fought the
conflict for 30 years or who were victims of it were working class, not all of
them but by far, the majority.
"If we are going to build a credible peace for the future we need to start building from the ground up and not the bottom down," he said. Mr Little said his party had submitted proposals for "a pact between former combatants" to intermediaries for three loyalist groups. And he said the IRSP had met the Progressive Unionist Party, who are linked to loyalist paramilitaries the Ulster Volunteer Force, and the Ulster Democratic Party, who are linked to the Ulster Freedom Fighters. Trade unionists and community groups were also involved in dialogue on the pact, he said. 'Plan open for amendment' The IRSP did not expect other groups to immediately sign up to its proposals, he added, saying that they had only drawn up a first version as a starting point. "This charter is going out there for amendment, to be added to and to be taken away from. "What we have, at present, is our analysis. We believe it is a fairly fair analysis of the situation, and certainly we are prepared to defend and define and articulate that position, but it is there for change. "What we would hope is that we come up with some form of agreement on the wording for a charter," he said. The IRSP dedicated a controversial memorial statue of a balaclava-wearing paramilitary to two INLA members who died in the 1981 hunger strikes in Derry City cemetery at the weekend. But Mr Little denied the statue was meant to be provocative to unionists and loyalists. The INLA has been on ceasefire since August 1998 and has benefited from the early prisoner release scheme despite its opposition to the Good Friday Agreement. |
See also:
Links to other Northern Ireland stories are at the foot of the page.
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