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Britain
Sinn Fein sez IRA may quit
2005-03-13
CINCINNATI (Reuters) - Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, in his first stop during a week-long visit to the United States, stressed his belief on Saturday that the Irish Republican Army will one day cease to exist. Adams reiterated what he told a Sinn Fein party conference a week ago that, "We in Sinn Fein want to see the IRA ceasing to be. I have said that I do think we'll see the day when there is no IRA." The head of the IRA's political ally began his visit under fire on both sides of the Atlantic over his party's ties to the guerrilla group, which has been accused of robbing a bank and shielding the killers of a Roman Catholic man in Northern Ireland. But Adams said he was unaware that a State Department official called on Friday for the political party to make a "clear break" with the IRA to restore the progress made toward a united Northern Irish government, based on equality between Catholics and Protestants.
Didn't catch the TV news, did he?
Adams is scheduled for a meeting with that official, special envoy Mitchell Reiss, in Washington on Wednesday. Reiss said the party must sever its links to the outlawed group, which remains armed despite its cease-fire, telling Reuters "It hard to understand how a European country in the year 2005 can have a private army associated with a political party."

"I'd be surprised if he did make that a condition for achieving progress in the peace process, but I'm looking forward to meeting with him," Adams told a news conference. He said he was disappointed but not offended that he was not invited to meet with President Bush at the White House on Thursday, St. Patrick's Day, when the president traditionally gets together with Irish government leaders.
It's easy, Gerry: you're not an Irish leader.
But he sidestepped any public denunciation of the IRA, saying Sinn Fein stands for peace and harmony among all Irish people. Adams told a social gathering of about 100 Irish-American supporters in Cincinnati that the recent murder of a Catholic man in Belfast, purportedly by elements of the IRA, was a "heinous, disgraceful act" He said Sinn Fein stands firmly in support of the family of the victim.
Posted by:Steve White

#4  I hope the FBI photographer got good shots.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-03-13 7:27:14 PM  

#3  a social gathering of about 100 Irish-American supporters in Cincinnati

It seems to me that in the past they were able to gather a great many more people to these things. Now, even with everything Keltic being popular in Cincinnati (the pubs are generally packed for the musicians), the Sinn Fein spokesman can only find a century of people to listen to him? Yup, post-9/11 things have indeed changed.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-03-13 7:22:25 PM  

#2  Adams should be picked up as a terr and sent to Gitmo.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-03-13 12:41:53 PM  

#1  After 9-11 everything changed. The Provos' soft front of Sinn Fein was seen as nothing but terrorist's and thugs' window dressing. Gerry Adams should not be given the time of day.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2005-03-13 12:06:22 PM  

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