A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, September 7, 2015
Northern Ireland executive business on hold for IRA talks
First
Minister Peter Robinson says there can be no "business as usual" in
Northern Ireland amid crisis talks over the future of power sharing.
Politicians are due to debate a Sinn Fein motion today condemning the
murders of former IRA members Jock Davison and Kevin McGuigan and
calling on anyone with information to pass it on to the police.
With the police saying the killings were carried out by members of the
Provisional IRA (PIRA) - which was supposed to have disappeared a decade
ago - the province's political institutions have been plunged into
crisis.
The British government says it will legislate on welfare reform in Northern Ireland if the parties at Stormont cannot reach an agreement on the issue.
Crisis
Assembly members are due to get back to work today after the summer
break, but Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader and first minister
Peter Robinson said
there would be no further routine meetings of the power-sharing executive until the crisis is resolved.
there would be no further routine meetings of the power-sharing executive until the crisis is resolved.
Talks are due to start this week at Stormont House, with Northern
Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers representing London and Foreign
Affairs Minister Charlie Flanagan representing Dublin.
Mr Robinson said: "If we are not satisfied that the parties are applying
themselves to achieving an outcome in a reasonable timeframe we will
initiate a further step or further steps.
"If it becomes apparent to us that a satisfactory resolution in the
talks is not possible then as a last resort ministerial resignations
will follow.
"However, we must make it clear that any election which follows such an
eventuality will not be an election to return to the present assembly
arrangements as we will not nominate a first minister until a
fundamental and more wide-ranging negotiation produces a system that can
fully function."
He said the assembly was not "fit for purpose" even before this summer's
murders, which police say were carried out by individual PIRA members.
Even though police insist the IRA is not back on a war footing, the
disclosure that the organisation - once considered the armed wing of
Sinn Fein - still exists has rocked Northern Ireland's divided political
establishment.
George Hamilton, chief constable of the Police Service of Northern
Ireland, said the IRA still exists for peaceful purposes and the
shooting was carried out by individual PIRA members but not sanctioned
by the group's leadership.
Welfare row
Unionists support a package of benefits cuts imposed by Westminster,
while Sinn Fein is opposed to austerity measures which it says will hurt
the most vulnerable.
Northern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers said: "We have come to the
conclusion that if the Executive cannot reach agreement on implementing
the budget and welfare aspects of the Stormont House Agreement, as a
last resort the Government will have to step in and legislate at
Westminster for welfare reform in Northern Ireland.
"We would do so reluctantly, and only if we had exhausted all the realistic alternatives.
"But we cannot stand by and let this situation drag on indefinitely with
Stormont becoming less and less able to deliver crucial public
services."
