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| Thursday, 25 July, 2002, 21:46 GMT 22:46 UK Trimble puts off assembly decision ![]() David Trimble wants more action from government A decision on whether the Ulster Unionist Party will pull out of Northern Ireland's power-sharing executive has been put off until September. Party leader David Trimble met his assembly members at Stormont on Thursday to discuss the government's statement on paramilitary ceasefires. Unionists had been calling on the prime minister to place sanctions on Sinn Fein over alleged IRA involvement in terrorist activity. But on Wednesday, Tony Blair stopped short of sanctions, saying any future breach of loyalist or republican ceasefires would be met with a "rigorous" response.
The Northern Ireland first minister refused to say whether he would call a meeting of his party's ruling council at that time. He said his assembly team wanted it on record that they thought the government's statement and conduct was "appalling". Mr Trimble said the Northern Ireland Secretary, John Reid, had given the impression the paramilitaries had won. Dr Reid said he was considering using an assessment of levels of paramilitary violence within both loyalist and republican communities to supplement his decisions on ceasefires and would decide on this over the summer. Tony Blair revisited the subject at the second of his "presidential-style" media briefings in London earlier on Thursday. He reiterated that the government was prepared to move against Sinn Fein if the IRA ceasefire was breached. While recognising loyalist violence, Mr Blair said it was Sinn Fein and the republican movement which was sitting in government. "We are looking carefully, as John Reid said yesterday, at precisely how to give credibility to any assessment. That we have some mechanism to assist us in this process," he said.
He was speaking in Dublin after talks with Irish Foreign Minister Brian Cowen on Thursday. "Mr Blair's statement yesterday named the IRA four times. "It did not mention the Ulster Defence Association. It did not mention the loyalist groups and all of that was based on bad advice to him by a system that used to pretend there was no such thing as sectarian attacks from loyalists," he said. "The British Government is not politically neutral on this issue so all of the advice will be to point out the republicans as the people who need to be confronted and it is a big challenge to turn that around." |
See also: 25 Jul 02 | N Ireland 24 Jul 02 | N Ireland 24 Jul 02 | N Ireland 24 Jul 02 | N Ireland 22 Jul 02 | N Ireland 17 Jul 02 | N Ireland 17 Jul 02 | N Ireland Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top N Ireland stories now: Links to more N Ireland stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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