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Little Hope Of Peace If There Is No Respect For The Pain Of Others

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  • Little Hope Of Peace If There Is No Respect For The Pain Of Others

    LITTLE HOPE OF PEACE IF THERE IS NO RESPECT FOR THE PAIN OF OTHERS
    by David Williamson

    Western Mail/Wales
    Nov 8 2007

    FOUR men from Northern Ireland visited the Senedd yesterday in search
    of inspiration.

    They were members of the Stormont Assembly and in Wales to learn
    how technology and translating services could be put to use in
    their own debating chamber. This was an unextraordinary meeting of
    elected representatives with counterparts from a different region of
    post-devolution UK.

    Twenty years ago today, 11 people were killed when a bomb
    exploded during a Remembrance Day service at Enniskillen in County
    Fermanagh. The fact these four politicians were chatting about the
    most mundane logistics of democracy is evidence of the near-miracle
    which has taken place in Northern Ireland.

    Francie Molloy, now Stormont's Deputy Presiding Officer, was director
    of elections for Bobby Sands during the 1981 hunger strikes by
    republican prisoners. Lord Morrow of Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionist
    Party opposed the Good Friday Agreement when it was spearheaded by
    David Trimble.

    Ulster Unionist Billy Armstrong, an Orangeman, was a part-time reserve
    constable with the RUC - 277 of whose officers were killed by the IRA.

    And Thomas Burns of the SDLP is a supporter of the Gaelic Athletic
    Association, which until recently banned UK police from its membership.

    Former enemies are now fighting for the votes of an electorate
    demanding efficient government.

    It is unlikely any of them would ever claim Ulster has a perfect
    peace. But important figures on each side of the divide decided
    to suspend their conflict, swallow the most bitter pills, tacitly
    acknowledge the deep grief in each community, and begin to build a
    new future.

    No such respect for those mourning their dead was evident on Saturday
    when a monument was unveiled outside the Temple of Peace in Cardiff
    in memory of the 1.3 million people Armenians believe died as the
    Ottoman Empire disintegrated. A crowd waving giant Turkish flags
    hollered there was no "genocide" and denounced the men and woman
    gathered around the small memorial as liars.

    Resolutions describing the deaths as genocide have been passed
    in countries including France, Switzerland, Canada, and, in 2000,
    Wales. This does not prove Armenians were targeted for extermination,
    but parliamentarians do not risk the ire of Turkey - a democracy and
    an ally - without good cause. The protesters who did their best to
    drown out the commemoration in Cardiff have a right to argue their
    version of history, but hopes for healing in a powder-keg region will
    be dashed if they demonise those who have carried memories of sorrow
    for generations.

    Ireland's pain is not buried far below the soil and there has been
    only limited reconciliation. It takes a tough and truly brave person
    to sit down with a foe - forgiveness may follow, but it is not the
    prerequisite for progress. That is respect.
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