Berliner Boersenzeitung - Sinn Fein hails 'new era' for N.Ireland after historic poll win

EUR -
AED 4.11213
AFN 76.65318
ALL 99.111691
AMD 433.831364
ANG 2.017863
AOA 1048.46728
ARS 1080.678438
AUD 1.627275
AWG 2.015204
AZN 1.90244
BAM 1.957413
BBD 2.260663
BDT 133.800282
BGN 1.955974
BHD 0.421861
BIF 3246.575928
BMD 1.119558
BND 1.438986
BOB 7.736411
BRL 6.104352
BSD 1.119623
BTN 93.644421
BWP 14.655407
BYN 3.66412
BYR 21943.332374
BZD 2.25688
CAD 1.50449
CDF 3208.093164
CHF 0.949704
CLF 0.037089
CLP 1023.454535
CNY 7.870268
CNH 7.868208
COP 4643.276304
CRC 579.883137
CUC 1.119558
CUP 29.668281
CVE 110.356945
CZK 25.121788
DJF 199.386121
DKK 7.457542
DOP 67.135335
DZD 147.975566
EGP 54.326878
ERN 16.793367
ETB 133.524952
FJD 2.450432
FKP 0.852609
GBP 0.836578
GEL 3.050787
GGP 0.852609
GHS 17.631146
GIP 0.852609
GMD 76.695389
GNF 9671.971939
GTQ 8.655134
GYD 234.205131
HKD 8.717263
HNL 27.813925
HRK 7.611886
HTG 147.791815
HUF 395.010223
IDR 16926.482032
ILS 4.206319
IMP 0.852609
INR 93.598893
IQD 1466.708907
IRR 47124.977866
ISK 150.491055
JEP 0.852609
JMD 175.344524
JOD 0.793321
JPY 161.511876
KES 144.434207
KGS 94.279389
KHR 4548.789884
KMF 494.788429
KPW 1007.601362
KRW 1490.58485
KWD 0.341768
KYD 0.93309
KZT 535.566214
LAK 24723.598789
LBP 100264.889214
LKR 336.84764
LRD 217.210972
LSL 19.275187
LTL 3.305762
LVL 0.677209
LYD 5.318384
MAD 10.812408
MDL 19.487497
MGA 5051.20848
MKD 61.519657
MMK 3636.279979
MNT 3804.257266
MOP 8.980182
MRU 44.267882
MUR 51.197125
MVR 17.196033
MWK 1941.127163
MXN 21.742203
MYR 4.624941
MZN 71.483424
NAD 19.275187
NGN 1835.246167
NIO 41.203962
NOK 11.681751
NPR 149.829494
NZD 1.772153
OMR 0.430983
PAB 1.119633
PEN 4.216375
PGK 4.448706
PHP 62.676762
PKR 311.06619
PLN 4.263936
PYG 8726.192398
QAR 4.081564
RON 4.97543
RSD 117.080041
RUB 103.72561
RWF 1518.264962
SAR 4.20045
SBD 9.303224
SCR 13.39652
SDG 673.415029
SEK 11.310898
SGD 1.437994
SHP 0.852609
SLE 25.578875
SLL 23476.560989
SOS 639.927448
SRD 33.865538
STD 23172.585547
SVC 9.797163
SYP 2812.922423
SZL 19.261876
THB 36.60226
TJS 11.918677
TMT 3.918452
TND 3.382588
TOP 2.622122
TRY 38.211789
TTD 7.618347
TWD 35.703258
TZS 3045.197348
UAH 46.169367
UGX 4134.407707
USD 1.119558
UYU 47.159291
UZS 14280.898317
VEF 4055656.852296
VES 41.167219
VND 27535.523456
VUV 132.916148
WST 3.131921
XAF 656.503975
XAG 0.035024
XAU 0.000421
XCD 3.025661
XDR 0.828283
XOF 656.498106
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.221523
ZAR 19.197914
ZMK 10077.364719
ZMW 29.698611
ZWL 360.497147
  • CMSC

    0.0299

    25.1

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    2.8400

    67.42

    +4.21%

  • RBGPF

    -0.6200

    59.48

    -1.04%

  • CMSD

    0.1150

    25.12

    +0.46%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    13.12

    +0.84%

  • NGG

    -0.3700

    70.11

    -0.53%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    48.53

    -0.68%

  • BTI

    0.2000

    38.1

    +0.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.04

    -0.43%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    10.09

    -0.2%

  • BP

    -0.0300

    32.83

    -0.09%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    35.13

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    40.98

    +0.29%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.42

    +0.89%

  • AZN

    -0.2700

    76.87

    -0.35%

  • BCC

    0.1300

    141.78

    +0.09%

Sinn Fein hails 'new era' for N.Ireland after historic poll win
Sinn Fein hails 'new era' for N.Ireland after historic poll win / Photo: Paul Faith - AFP

Sinn Fein hails 'new era' for N.Ireland after historic poll win

Sinn Fein leader Michelle O'Neill on Saturday acclaimed a "new era" for Northern Ireland as her Irish nationalist party handed a historic election defeat to pro-UK unionists who had monopolised power for decades.

Text size:

Once the political wing of the paramilitary IRA, Sinn Fein won enough seats in the devolved legislature to nominate O'Neill as first minister -- a century after Northern Ireland was carved out as a Protestant fiefdom under British rule.

O'Neill appealed for a "healthy debate" about reunifying Ireland, but the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) stood by its refusal to form a new power-sharing government, opening up the prospect of months-long political limbo.

"Today ushers in a new era," said O'Neill, who at 45 came of political age after the 1998 Good Friday Agreement ended three decades of bloodshed in Northern Ireland.

"It's a defining moment for our politics and our people," she added.

"I will provide leadership which is inclusive, which celebrates diversity, which guarantees rights and equality for those who have been excluded, discriminated against or ignored in the past."

With 88 of 90 seats filled from Thursday's proportional voting, Sinn Fein was assured of 27 seats in the Stormont assembly, ahead of the DUP and the cross-community Alliance party.

"The people have spoken, and our job is now to turn up. I expect others to turn up also," O'Neill told reporters, stressing the new government must tackle foremost a cost-of-living crisis in the UK, ahead of the debate about Irish unity.

The DUP occupied the role of first minister in the outgoing assembly, before it collapsed the executive in protest at post-Brexit trading rules between the UK and EU.

- 'Long shadow' -

DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson demanded that UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson "deliver on his word to honour the commitments he has given and to take the action that is necessary" on the Northern Ireland Protocol.

He urged "decisive action by the government to remove the Irish Sea border, because we don't believe it is acceptable or necessary to have checks on goods moving within the United Kingdom".

While Sinn Fein will get to nominate a first minister, Northern Ireland's government can only form under the 1998 deal if the DUP agrees to take part and serve in the role of deputy first minister.

"I want a government in Northern Ireland, but it has to be one based on stable foundations," Donaldson said.

"And the long shadow of the Northern Ireland Protocol is harming our economy, it's harming political stability."

Johnson's Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis was expected to meet the party leaders in Belfast on Monday. The parties will have 24 weeks to resolve their differences or face a new election.

England, Wales and Scotland also voted in local and regional elections on Thursday, punishing embattled Johnson's scandal-mired Conservatives but without a landslide for the main opposition Labour party.

Johnson is expected to lay out his post-election plans in the Queen's Speech in parliament on Tuesday, which will have to take into account the thorny issue of forming a government in Northern Ireland, riven for so long by sectarian unrest.

The other big winner in Northern Ireland was Alliance, which said its strong showing in third place underlined the need for Northern Ireland to move past old divisions.

"I think given all the challenges that we face, if we squander this opportunity people will not forgive us, so we need to get in there," Alliance leader Naomi Long said.

- 'Angry unionism' -

The leader of the once-dominant Ulster Unionist Party, which struggled in the election, said many voters were tired of "angry negative unionism".

"It may take a while to change that psyche," UUP chief Doug Beattie told reporters. "It may well be a supertanker that has a large turning circle. But we need to do it."

Katy Hayward, professor of political sociology at Queen's University Belfast, said it was "extraordinary and highly significant to have a nationalist party holding the most seats in the assembly".

Any referendum on Irish reunification was some way off, she said, but Ireland's Foreign Minister Simon Coveney should also come to Belfast with Lewis on Monday.

"The success of Sinn Fein, if nothing else, underlines the importance of the Irish dimension. There can't be any solution magicked up by the UK government unilaterally," Hayward told AFP.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)