This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/northern_ireland/7044060.stm
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Minister stops loyalist project | |
(1 day later) | |
Social Development Minister Margaret Ritchie has announced her intention to stop a loyalist initiative which was to get £1.2m of government funding. | |
However, at the Northern Ireland assembly Finance Minister Peter Robinson accused her of being in breach of the ministerial code. | |
A 60-day deadline for the Ulster Defence Association to begin giving up guns expired last Tuesday. | |
The deadline was set in August after repeated violence linked to the UDA. | |
However, the UDA said it would adhere to its own timetable for getting rid of its weapons. | |
The CTI project can no longer be justified and I propose to end it immediately Margaret RitchieSocial development minister How cash carrot was pulled In a statement to the assembly, Ms Ritchie said the actions of the UDA had meant the retention of the Conflict Transformation Initiative originally proposed by Peter Hain could not be justified. | |
"The UDA's fractious nature means, at this time the organisation is unable to meet the objectives of the CTI (Conflict Transformation Initiative). | |
"The CTI project can no longer be justified and I propose to end it immediately," she said. | |
After Ms Ritchie finished her statement, Mr Robinson claimed she had "ignored" the government's own legal advice and "might be acting beyond her legal powers". | |
The assembly suspended its sitting for about half-an-hour whilst legal advice was sought on the matter. | |
BBC Northern Ireland Political Editor Mark Devenport described the scenes in the chamber as "extraordinary". | |
What you have is the minister pulling the rug from under our feet, saying that by reducing funding in these communities she will reduce paramilitarism - the exact opposite is the case Chris McGimpseyFarset "After its honeymoon period," he said, "there have been a number of rifts within the executive, over issues like the Irish language and gay rights. | |
"However, the evident division between the SDLP minister and her colleagues is the most bitter and personal split within the executive since devolution was restored." | |
Ms Ritchie has said she came under pressure from direct rule ministers to compromise on her deadline. | |
However, Security Minister Paul Goggins said the final decision on whether to redirect £1.2m from the Conflict Transformation Initiative to other loyalist projects was hers. | However, Security Minister Paul Goggins said the final decision on whether to redirect £1.2m from the Conflict Transformation Initiative to other loyalist projects was hers. |
The UDA insists it will decommission in its own timeChris McGimpsey of Farset, the organisation which was administering the project, said Ms Ritchie's decision would be counterproductive. | |
"It's not a UDA issue - what we have here is a number of loyalist working class communities which are suffering from social deprivation," he said. | |
"I have no love of the UDA - they've threatened to kill me twice - but Farset has been going for 25 years and has a fairly good press in both communities, trying to administer funds into areas where the UDA and other paramilitary groups are strong in an effort to seduce people away from paramilitarism. | |
"What you have is the minister pulling the rug from under our feet, saying that by reducing funding in these communities she will reduce paramilitarism - the exact opposite is the case." |