Motion passed by the Sinn Féin Extraordinary Ard Fheis on Policing, RDS, Dublin, (28 January 2007)[Key_Events] [Key_Issues] [Conflict_Background] POLITICS: [Menu] [Reading] [Articles] [Government] [Political_Initiatives] [Political_Solutions] [Parties] [Elections] [Polls] [Sources] [Peace_Process] Motion passed by the Sinn Féin Extraordinary Ard Fheis on Policing, RDS, Dublin, (28 January 2007)
"This Ard Fheis reiterates Sinn Féin's political commitment to bringing about Irish re-unification and the establishment of a 32 County Democratic Socialist Republic. This Ard Fheis supports civic policing through a police service which is representative of the community it serves, free from partisan political control and democratically accountable. We support and will work for the development of a routinely unarmed police service as envisaged in the Good Friday Agreement. We support fair, impartial and effective delivery of the rule of law. The changes to policing secured in all reforming legislation, including by Sinn Féin needs to be implemented fully. The truth about wrongdoing by British military, intelligence and policing agencies needs to be uncovered and acknowledged. Sinn Féin supports the demands for this from the families of victims. The PSNI needs to make strenuous efforts to earn the trust and confidence of nationalists and republicans. Gardaí corruption and malpractice - which has been exposed in the Morris Tribunal and the Abbeylara inquiry in the 26 counties - shows the need for constant vigilance and oversight. These inquiries and the ill-treatment of republicans by the Garda Special Branch also provide compelling reasons as to why the responsibility of political parties and representatives should be to hold the police to account in a fair and publicly transparent way. This Ard Fheis is totally opposed to political, sectarian and repressive policing and any form of criminalization of republicanism. The experience of nationalists and republicans in the Six Counties is of a partisan, unionist militia which engaged in harassment, torture, assassination, shoot-to-kill and collusion with death squads and we will never endorse such policing practices. The Good Friday Agreement requires and defines 'a new beginning to policing' as an essential element of the peace process. The Good Friday Agreement also requires functioning, powersharing and all-Ireland political institutions. The British Government have agreed to the transfer of powers on policing and justice away from Westminster to locally-elected political institutions and have set out the departmental model to which these powers will be transferred. In these circumstances authority over policing and justice will lie in Ireland. We note the British Government's new policy statement of 10 January 2007 which removes MI5 from policing structures in Ireland. This removes the proposals to embed MI5 into civic policing and removes the danger of again creating a force within a force. We note also the commitment by PSNI Chief Constable Hugh Orde that plastic bullets will not be used for purposes of public order/crowd control and his acknowledgement of the hurt resulting from injuries and death of innocent people including children. These weapons should never be used again. Sinn Féin will continue to campaign for a total ban. This Ard Fheis notes the refusal of the DUP leader Ian Paisley to publicly commit to power-sharing and participation in the all-Ireland political institutions by 26 March 2007. Before the Ard Chomhairle meeting on 29 December the DUP had agreed words which they would release in response to the Ard Chomhairle accepting the policing motion put by the Party President. We note the DUP's failure to keep to this commitment. It is clear that elements of the DUP are determined to use policing and other issues to prevent progress, resist powersharing and equality and oppose any all-Ireland development. This is unacceptable. It is the responsibility of the two Governments and pro-Agreement parties across the island to resist this and to ensure the full implementation of the Good Friday Agreement. Sinn Fein is committed to justice. Sinn Fein is committed to law and order and to stable and inclusive partnership government, and, in good faith and in a spirit of genuine partnership, to the full operation of stable power-sharing government and the north south and east west arrangements set out in the Good Friday Agreement. The responsibility of the police is to defend and uphold the rights of citizens. In order to fulfil this role they require critical support. Sinn Féin reiterates our support for An Garda Síochana and commits fully to:
To achieve this the Ard Chomhairle is hereby mandated to:
The Ard Chomhairle recommends: That this Ard Fheis endorses the Ard Chomhairle motion. That the Ard Chomhairle is mandated to implement this motion only when the power-sharing institutions are established and when the Ard Chomhairle is satisfied that the policing and justice powers will be transferred. Or if this does not happen within the St Andrews timeframe, only when acceptable new partnership arrangements to implement the Good Friday Agreement are in place."
|
CAIN
contains information and source material on the conflict
and politics in Northern Ireland. CAIN is based within Ulster University. |
|
|||
Last modified :
|
||
|