A history of the Northern Ireland conflict
- February 8, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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A history of the Northern Ireland conflict
Subject: IR
Section: Places in news
Context:
- An Irish nationalist made history recently by becoming Northern Ireland’s first minister as the government returned to work after a two-year boycott.
- The Parliament of Northern Ireland was paralysed over new trade rules between the European Union and the United Kingdom necessitated by Brexit.
Background
- Northern Ireland was created in May 1921 by partitioning Ireland, and consists of the six northeastern counties of the island.
- In 1922, the rest of Ireland gained independence from the British (today’s Republic of Ireland, with its capital in Dublin).
- Northern Ireland remained with the United Kingdom, but tensions simmered between the side loyal to the Crown, and the faction wanting to join the Republic.
- Today, the side loyal to the British Union are called unionists, while those who support a united and free Ireland are called nationalists.
Good Friday agreement or The Belfast Agreement
- By the end of the 1960s, a bloody conflict was raging in Northern Ireland among those who wished to remain with the UK and those who wanted to join Ireland.
- Finally, in 1998, the Good Friday Agreement was signed to end the bloodshed, and gave Northern Ireland a unique system of governance.
Unique system of governance
- Both unionists and nationalists share power in Stormont, the Parliament buildings in Belfast.
- Both sides have to cooperate for the government to work.
- While the faction that wins more votes in elections gets the post of First Minister, the other side gets the chair of Deputy First Minister, with equal power.
Northern Ireland Protocol and Collapse of Parliament in 2022
- After the UK left the European Union, Northern Ireland remained its only constituent that shared a land border with an EU-member, the Republic of Ireland.
- Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) together with Northern Ireland forms the United Kingdom.
- Since the EU and the UK have different product standards, border checks would be necessary before goods could move from Northern Ireland to Ireland.
- However, an open border between the two was a key component of the 1998 Good Friday agreement.
- Keeping this in mind, Northern Ireland Protocol was negotiated in 2020 between the U.K. and the E.U.
About the protocol
- The protocol is a trading agreement that was negotiated in 2020 between the U.K. and the E.U.
- Under this agreement both the U.K. and E.U. agreed that the inspection of goods would be conducted between Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
- This agreement effectively created a de facto border in the Irish Sea between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K.
- Northern Ireland continued to follow many of the EU’s rules, meaning that lorries can continue to drive across the border without having to be inspected.
- The protocol was signed as part of the Brexit withdrawal agreement, which is now ratified under international law.
Protocol led to the Collapse of Northern Ireland Parliament (Stormont) in 2022
- This protocol angered the unionists, who believed it undermined Northern Ireland’s position with the UK.
- Thus, the Unionists refused to allow government formation after Northern Ireland went to polls in May 2022, and did not allow Stormont to function.
The new deal
- Various efforts were made to resolve the problem, including the Windsor Framework of February 2023.
Windsor Framework
- The framework has two crucial aspects:
- The introduction of a green lane and red lane system for goods that will stay in Northern Ireland and those that will go to the EU respectively;
- The ‘Stormont Brake’, which allows Northern Ireland lawmakers and London to veto any EU regulation they believe affects the region adversely.
- British goods meant for Northern Ireland will use the green lane at the ports, and will be allowed to pass with minimal paperwork and checks.
- Goods destined for Ireland or the rest of the EU will have to take the red lane, with the attendant customs and other checks.
- The new Stormont Brake means the democratically elected Northern Ireland Assembly can oppose new EU goods rules that would have significant and lasting effects on everyday lives in Northern Ireland.
A new deal has been reached
- Windsor Framework was refused by the Unionist by saying that these measures were far too little.
- Now, a new deal has been reached, published as a command paper called ‘Safeguarding the Union’ by the UK government.
- Its three main points include:
- The green lane is now called the UK Internal Market channel, on which checks and customs paperwork have been reduced further, to only “risk and intelligence-based checks” relating to “criminality, smuggling and disease”;
- There is a “Internal Market Guarantee” which says that at least 80% of Great Britain to Northern Ireland goods will pass through this channel;
- The UK government will extend a £3.3 billion package to help Northern Ireland’s finances.