Remembering Lyra McKee: A Funeral in Ireland Attended by Leo Varadkar, Michael Higgins, Theresa May, Jeremy Corbyn
The Taoiseach (prime minister) of the Republic of Ireland Leo Varadkar and Prime Minister Theresa May of the United Kingdom both showed up on Wednesday in Belfast in Northern Ireland for the
funeral of a young woman called Lyra McKee. So did the president of the Republic of Ireland, Michael Higgins, and UK opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn. It is quite possible that none of them had even heard of her a week ago.
She was a promising young journalist, already well known
in the small world of Northern Ireland for her political journalism and
her LGBT activism. She was killed a week ago by a New IRA terrorist
while covering a riot in Derry, the British province’s second city. It
was a mistake, of course: The terrorist was probably trying to kill one
of the police officers who were standing nearby.
The funeral was held in Belfast’s main Protestant
cathedral, St. Anne’s, although McKee had grown up Catholic. Both
Catholic and Protestant clergy conducted the funeral service, in a joint
rejection of the sectarian violence that is creeping out into the open
again in Northern Ireland. That is why the prime ministers and other
high dignitaries were there too, but it may be too late.
Lyra McKee described herself as a “ceasefire baby”. She
was only eight years old when the Good Friday Agreement was signed in
1998, ending 30 years of “The Troubles”, a terrorist civil war between
Protestant and Catholic extremists that killed over 3,000 people in a
province whose population is less than 2 million. But the war was not
actually about religion.
The Protestants were loyal to Britain, and resentful about
losing the absolute dominance they once enjoyed in Northern Ireland.
The Catholics were “nationalists” who looked forward to the day when
they would be the majority in Northern Ireland, thanks to a higher birth
rate, and then to the great day when all of Ireland will be united and
the “Prods” of the North are reduced to a tiny and helpless minority.
They fought each other to a standstill, and in 1998 they
signed the Good Friday Agreement, which created a power-sharing
government in Northern Ireland and put an end to the killing. Most
people realised it was a truce, not a final peace settlement, but many
hoped that given enough time, it could grow into something more.
Generational turnover has solved a lot of the world’s problems.
In the meantime, the deal allowed a generation of young
people, like McKee, to grow up in a relatively peaceful place. It might
still be a place with a hopeful future today if the English had not
voted to leave the European Union three years ago in the “Brexit”
referendum. I say “English” deliberately, because both the Scots and the
Northern Irish voted for the United Kingdom to stay in the EU.
The problem with Brexit is that the Good Friday Deal
depends on a completely open border between Northern Ireland and the
Republic. In fact, an invisible border: no police, no checkpoints and
little visual evidence that it even exists. That, plus the right to have
an Irish passport instead of a British one if they chose, was what
persuaded the North’s Catholic nationalists to settle for a draw in the
war.
Everybody in Ireland saw the problem with Brexit: If the
UK withdraws fully from the EU, no customs union, no “single market”,
then the “hard” border will have to reappear in Ireland. The more
extreme nationalists will see that as a betrayal, and the guns will come
out again. But the insular idiots promoting Brexit in England were not
even aware of the problem.
They are aware of it now. The Republic of Ireland remains a
member of the EU, and it got the other members to insist that
protecting the “soft” border must be part of the British withdrawal
agreement.
Last November, Theresa May signed that agreement, which
says that all of the United Kingdom must stay in the customs union until
some UK-EU trade agreement is signed that still allows free movement of
goods, and people, across an invisible border.
That could be a long time from now, or even never, in
which case the UK never really leaves the EU. It just loses any say in
the EU’s policies. So the outraged British parliament has spent the last
two months rejecting not only the withdrawal agreement May signed, but
every other proposal for leaving, or staying, that has been put before
it. Pathetic, really.
Meanwhile, the first terrorist attacks are getting started
again in Northern Ireland. The “dissidents” who formed the Real IRA in
2012 are nationalists who never accepted the truce. They have been
waiting for an opportunity to reopen the revolutionary liberation war
that they imagine was betrayed by the Good Friday Agreement, and Brexit
is giving it to them.
There was a car bomb outside the courthouse in Derry in
January, and last week the New IRA tried to kill a police officer and
shot Lyra McKee instead. As Will Francis, her literary agent, said
(quoting William Faulkner): “The past isn’t dead. It’s not even past.”
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Featured image is from RTE
The original source of this article is Jordan Times
Copyright © Gwynne Dyer, Jordan Times, 2019
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