What a bizarre irony. The international press are playing up the lovefest between the once-implacable enemies who have united to revive the "devolved" government at Stormont for the first time since the power-sharing assembly was suspended in October 2002: new First Minister Ian Paisley of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP [2]) (who in 1998 was forcibly ejected from his Europarliament seat for calling Pope John Paul II the "anti-Christ"—to his face!) and Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness of Sinn Féin [3] (a former IRA commander who was convicted on "terrorism" charges in 1973). Meanwhile, protesters who gathered outside the Stormont parliament building to condemn the swearing-in ceremony as a sell-out included both veteran IRA militants who decried the betrayal of Republicanism and a group called "Justice for Protestants" made up of Ulster Defence Regiment veterans—paradoxically united by their mutual desire to avoid uniting with each other. Just to add to the fun, a group of anti-war protesters also showed up to protest Tony Blair's appearance at the affair. (Canberra Times [4], May 10; Belfast Telegraph [5], May 9; RTE News [6], May 8; BBC News Profile: Martin McGuinness [7])
See our last post on Northern Ireland [8].