May 24, 2024
Shadows of the Troubles linger 25 years after Northern Ireland peace deal | CBC News

Shadows of the Troubles linger 25 years after Northern Ireland peace deal | CBC News

This month marks 25 years since the Good Friday Agreement largely ended “the Troubles,” three decades of bloodshed in Northern Ireland that left 3,600 people dead, some 50,000 wounded and thousands bereaved.

Northern Ireland is observing the anniversary with a reunion of key peace process players and a visit from U.S. President Joe Biden.

The peace accord may have stopped the fighting, but deep divisions remain over the conflict’s legacy — making it hard for some of Northern Ireland’s 1.9 million people to move past it.

And Britain’s exit from the European Union has only complicated matters, creating political tensions that have rattled the foundations of the peace agreement.

A woman pushing a stroller walks past a mural in Belfast.
A woman walks past an Irish nationalist mural in Belfast last month. (Peter Morrison/The Associated Press)

To move on or confront the past

Peter Olphert was 14 when Irish Republican Army gunmen killed his father. Forty years later, he says it’s time to set aside the past.

“It is time, in my opinion, to draw a line in the sand and move forward,” said Olphert, who recently retired after 30 years as a police officer — the same job held by his father John Olphert, who was shot dead by masked gunmen in 1983.

In some ways, Peter Olphert made the decision to move on years ago.

A paramilitary mural is seen in Belfast.
A local resident walks past a paramilitary mural in Belfast on Tuesday. (Charles McQuillan/Getty Images)

He said it would have been “very easy” for him, as a grieving teenager, to join one of the pro-British loyalist militias waging war against Irish republican militants in a neighbour-on-neighbour conflict that also drew in the British military.

“The more you perpetuate what happened in the past, the more generations are going to have that bitterness,” he said.

Mark Thompson lost his brother to British Army bullets, and thinks society can’t move forward until it confronts unfinished business.

Thompson argued that for many bereaved families, moving on is not so simple — and moving on without fully grappling with the past could inadvertently set the stage for more conflict.

After his brother Peter was shot dead by undercover British soldiers in Belfast in 1990, he co-founded Relatives for Justice, a group that campaigns to uncover the truth about killings involving U.K. security forces, for which there have been few prosecutions.

A man on a scooter passes a mural painted on a wall in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
A man rides a scooter past an Irish nationalist mural in Belfast last month. (Peter Morrison/The Associated Press)

“To say that we draw a line under that means that we don’t learn the lessons of it,” Thompson said.

“The lesson of any society emerging from conflict is you can’t sweep it under the carpet because … it really reinvigorates some of the grievances that lead to further conflict.”

Ending the Troubles meant balancing competing identities in Northern Ireland, which remained in the United Kingdom when the rest of Ireland won independence a century ago.

Irish nationalists in the north — most of them Catholic — sought union with the Republic of Ireland, while largely Protestant unionists wanted to stay part of the U.K.

The Good Friday Agreement, struck on April 10, 1998, committed armed groups to stop fighting, ended direct British rule and set up a Northern Ireland legislature and government with power shared between unionist and nationalist parties.

The peace accord succeeded far better than many expected, despite occasional attacks by dissident armed groups.

A changing Belfast

During the Troubles, downtown Belfast was a ghost town at night, surrounded by a security ring of steel.

Now busy pubs, hip cafes and microbreweries dot the Victorian streets. A gleaming new campus for Ulster University is helping revive the scarred city centre.

“It’s a hugely different place now,” said Steve Malone, a guide who leads walking tours focused on Belfast’s bloody past.

“Even in the physical infrastructure. We now have a transport system that connects the western, Catholic-dominated side of the city with the eastern, Protestant-dominated side. That did not happen during the conflict.”

But the threat of violence has never completely disappeared, and Katy Hayward, professor of political sociology at Queen’s University Belfast, said one goal of the peace agreement has been neglected: reconciliation.

She said the deal placed emphasis on releasing prisoners jailed for taking part in the conflict and reintegrating them into society. 

As a result, former militants “remain powerful and influential” in their communities, often to the exclusion of peacebuilders.

A plan by the U.K. government to end prosecutions of both militants and British soldiers for alleged crimes committed during the Troubles would only further bury hopes of holding perpetrators to account.

It has been met with widespread opposition.

A couple walks alongside a stretch of Belfast's "peace walls."
A couple walks along a section of Belfast’s ‘peace walls.’ (Charles McQuillan/Getty Images)

The possibility of violence is the reason fortified 8-metre-high “peace walls” still separate some nationalist and unionist neighbourhoods in Belfast.

Rival murals of masked IRA fighters and gun-toting loyalist militants adorn streets on either side.

Brexit fallout

Britain’s departure from the European Union, which left Northern Ireland poised uneasily between the rest of Britain and EU-member Ireland, has also upset a delicate political balance, including the power-sharing system set up by the peace accord.

The Northern Ireland Assembly has not sat for more than a year, after the main unionist party pulled out of the government to protest new trade rules brought in after Brexit.

Some argue that the power-sharing structure no longer works in a changing Northern Ireland, where more than 40 per cent of people now identify as neither nationalist nor unionist.

Catholics outnumber Protestants and the question of whether in the long run Northern Ireland will remain part of the U.K. or join the south — the issue that fuelled the Troubles — remains unresolved.

Source link