Wednesday, January 23, 2008
What Tony told Ian and Gerry and what neither must know…
Worth a brief mention is the fact that an otherwise unsuccessful Freedom of Information request by Jim Allister has established the existence of letters which were withheld because they “would prejudice to the effective conduct of the NI Executive”. The MEP’s fuller statement is mostly speculative, yet raises a number of intriguing questions. Not least about unmatching expectations from both main parties in government about what can be settled and when…
From Jim Allister
“In pursuit of my FOI requests with the NIO, arising from the St Andrews negotiations, I had asked for all documentation which issued to Sinn Fein and the DUP at or following the St Andrews Conference. Whereas some documents have been furnished to me I am concerned that an unspecified number of communications have been withheld on the politically significant grounds that their disclosure would cause “prejudice to the effective conduct of the Northern Ireland Executive”.
It has been specified to me by the NIO that the withheld information is contained in letters between Ministers and the leaders of Sinn Fein and the DUP, which were issued “at or following the St Andrews summit”.
So, there are secret letters which passed from Ministers to the Sinn Fein and DUP leaders which have not been made public and the reason is that their publication might cause “prejudice to the effective conduct of the NI Executive”. This causes me to believe that there may be letters unique and specific to the DUP and Sinn Fein, raising the public interest question of whether what has been said to each party by HMG is compatible or consistent. Might this be the “threat” to the effective conduct of the Executive, namely that if each knew what the other had been told or promised, it could undermine the working of the Executive? For example, if Sinn Fein had secret promises on an amnesty, or dismantling operations against criminality in South Armagh, or on the Irish Language, it could indeed destabilise the Executive.
It seems to me that the public interest of straightforward dealing and open government has been swamped by political considerations. Surely, the public are rightly entitled to know what HMG said or promised to each of the key parties in these secret letters which flowed at or from St Andrews.I know, from what the NIO has written to me, that some of the documentation pertains to “issues that are still subject to discussion with the NI parties”. Thus I expect policing and justice is included, but has HMG told the two parties the same thing or are they telling each what they want to hear. If they are, then that certainly could destabilise Stormont.
Not being satisfied that the public interest is being served by the withholding of this documentation I have lodged a formal request for a review and, ultimately, I will take this matter to the Information Commissioner.”
Mick Fealty @ 01:01 PM
“a state more akin to terror than nervousness”
A case of wishful thinking?
There has been a successful Budget (despite initial disagreement) a successful wooing of the SDLP away from any potential meeting of minds with the UUP and the govt. seems set for a fair wind.
Punters are feeling the benefits in their pockets and Allister will be out of elected office on his arse within a relatively short space of time. One can never rule out the possibility of an O’Neill-era Silent Valley type incident, but then none of the old Ulster Resistance people are still around. Or are they?
Posted by on Jan 23, 2008 @ 03:48 PM“none of the old Ulster Resistance people are still around”
I can think of two, Jo: Ian Paisley and Peter Robinson. Do they count? The first is certainly old enough ...
Posted by on Jan 23, 2008 @ 04:09 PMJo,
Run a Google search on Ulster Resistance and you will get lots of names familiar to most of us including one who is largely responsible for the hatred and misery that prevailed in Northern Ireland over three decades.
My state of terror remarked referred to the DUP’s reactions to Jim Allister, not to the local “budget”.
Posted by on Jan 23, 2008 @ 04:44 PMHmmm..I was thinking of other individuals who were directly involved in attempts to obtain arms and trading Shorts missile info to the (then) South African intelligence service. Thankfully most of the former UR has become somewhat distanced from armaments, though there is a lovely pic of Robbo posing with an assault rifle somewhere. Ah, all our yesterdays…
Posted by on Jan 24, 2008 @ 08:49 AMJo, did Robbo (jpg image) ever see ‘military’ action during the Troubles or has someone been having fun with image editing?
Posted by on Jan 24, 2008 @ 01:24 PM



