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 Northern IrelandSteps Toward PeaceIn Oct. 1977, the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Mairead
Corrigan and Betty Williams, founders of the Community of Peace People, a
nonsectarian organization dedicated to creating peace in Northern Ireland.
Intermittent violence continued, however, and on Aug. 27, 1979, an IRA
bomb killed Lord Mountbatten as he was sailing off southern Ireland. This
incident heightened tensions. Catholic protests over the death of IRA
hunger striker Bobby Sands in 1981 fueled more violence. Riots, sniper
fire, and terrorist attacks killed more than 3,200 people between 1969 and
1998. Among the attempts at reconciliation undertaken during the 1980s was
the Anglo-Irish Agreement (1985), which, to the dismay of Unionists,
marked the first time the Republic of Ireland had been given an official
consultative role in the affairs of the province.
In 1997, Northern Ireland made a significant step in the direction of
stemming sectarian strife. The first formal peace talks began on Oct. 6
with representatives of eight major Northern Irish political parties
participating, a feat that in itself required three years of negotiations.
Two smaller Protestant parties, including extremist Ian Paisley's
Democratic Unionists, boycotted the talks. For the first time, Sinn Fein,
the political wing of the IRA, won two seats in the British parliament,
which went to Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams and his second-in-command,
Martin McGuinness. Although the election strengthened the IRA's political
legitimacy, it was the IRA's resumption of the 17-month cease-fire, which
had collapsed in Feb. 1996, that gained them a place at the negotiating
table.
A landmark settlement, the Good Friday Agreement of April 10, 1998,
came after 19 months of intensive negotiations. The accord called for
Protestants to share political power with the minority Catholics, and it
gave the Republic of Ireland a voice in Northern Irish affairs. In turn,
Catholics were to suspend the goal of a united Ireland—a territorial
claim that was the raison d'être of the IRA and was written into the
Irish Republic's constitution—unless the largely Protestant North
voted in favor of such an arrangement, an unlikely occurrence.
The resounding commitment to the settlement was demonstrated in a dual
referendum on May 22, 1998: the North approved the accord by a vote of 71%
to 29%, and in the Irish Republic 94% favored it. In October, the Nobel
Peace Prize was awarded to John Hume and David Trimble, leaders of the
largest Catholic and Protestant political parties, an incentive for all
sides to ensure that this time the peace would last.
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