2000
[DOCID: f:hr185ih.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 185
Supporting the implementation of the Good Friday Agreement as the
framework for the peaceful settlement of the conflict in Northern
Ireland.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
June 28, 2001
Mr. Gallegly submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on International Relations
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Supporting the implementation of the Good Friday Agreement as the
framework for the peaceful settlement of the conflict in Northern
Ireland.
Whereas the April 10, 1998, Good Friday Agreement established a framework for
the peaceful settlement of the conflict in Northern Ireland;
Whereas the Good Friday Agreement provided for the devolution of government from
the United Kingdom to local institutions in Northern Ireland,
established a North/South Ministerial Council, a British-Irish Council,
and consisted of provisions regarding decommissioning, human rights,
policing, and prisoners;
Whereas in a referendum on May 22, 1998, the people of Northern Ireland and the
Republic of Ireland voted overwhelmingly in favor of the Good Friday
Agreement;
Whereas the Good Friday Agreement provided for the establishment of an
Independent Commission on Policing to reorganize current policing
practices and to encourage widespread community support for new policing
arrangements;
Whereas the Independent Commission on Policing issued a report, referred to as
the Patten report, which proposed approximately 175 recommendations to
ensure a new beginning to policing most of which were approved by the
Parliament of the United Kingdom;
Whereas some of the signatories to the Good Friday Agreement have complained
that the subsequent policing legislation adopted by the Parliament
failed to fully implement several of the Patten Commission
recommendations regarding accountability, authority of the police
commissioner, and the commitment to human rights;
Whereas, despite the concerns that the policing provisions are inadequate, plans
to implement the recommendations in the Patten report in order to
achieve an effective and representative policing service are underway
and have resulted in a reported 7,000 applications for positions on the
new, balanced police force of Northern Ireland;
Whereas one party to the Good Friday Agreement has declined to appoint its
commissioners to the policing board because of its concerns thereby
resulting in the inability of the Board to fully implement the necessary
reforms needed to provide an effective policing service in a truly
balanced manner;
Whereas the Good Friday Agreement established an Independent Commission on
Decommissioning to facilitate the process of decommissioning of
paramilitary arms;
Whereas spokespersons for the organizations involved in decommissioning,
including the Ulster Volunteer Force and the Ulster Freedom Fighters,
have indicated a willingness to make progress on decommissioning and the
Irish Republican Army has actually created sites where weapons used by
their members have been stored as a way to prevent the weapons from
being used and have subjected the storage sites to international
inspection, however, there has been little permanent decommissioning;
Whereas earlier polls indicated that the overwhelming majority of the people of
Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland supported decommissioning
and recent newspaper and media reports have called for further
implementation steps be taken to rid the weapons permanently from the
organizations involved;
Whereas the North/South Ministerial Council has been unable to meet or act in a
truly representative or effective manner due to the actions of one party
to the Good Friday Agreement which refuses to permit all named
representatives to participate;
Whereas the Government of the United Kingdom and the Royal Ulster Constabulary
in Northern Ireland, despite reports that the use of plastic bullets is
counterproductive and often used in a sectarian manner, and despite
calls from the European Union to ban the use of plastic bullets, still
insist on providing British Army units and the Royal Ulster Constabulary
with deadly plastic bullets;
Whereas, despite the glaring, but not insurmountable, flaws in the
implementation of the Good Friday Agreement, the citizens of Northern
Ireland recently went to the polls in national and local elections and
in a vote of confidence overwhelmingly voted for candidates representing
the parties which supported the Good Friday Agreement and the peace
process; and
Whereas the United States must remain politically involved in a bi-partisan
manner to ensure the long-term success of the peace agreement: Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) recognizes the continued importance of the Good Friday
Agreement and urges all parties to the Agreement to work more
diligently for the implementation of its provisions;
(2) congratulates the people of Northern Ireland for once
again demonstrating their faith in and continued support for
the peace process, the Good Friday Agreement, and those
political parties and candidates who support the Agreement;
(3) supports the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, the
Irish Taoiseach, and all the leaders of the political parties
in Northern Ireland who created the opportunity for a
negotiated peace, but now urges them to put aside past
differences and disputes and to proceed in a meaningful way to
actually implement those agreements which they endorsed;
(4) encourages all signatories to the Good Friday Agreement
to remain supportive of the peace process and not to take any
precipitous or unnecessary actions which could undermine the
process, including the weakening or demise of the independent
government structures or the Good Friday Agreement itself;
(5) encourages the Government of the United Kingdom to
review the concerns expressed about the inadequacies of
implementation of the reforms in the report of the Independent
Commission on Policing, referred to as the Patten report, and
to submit for remedy those changes which will assist the
process;
(6) encourages those parties to the Good Friday Agreement
which have not appointed members to the policing board to do so
in a timely fashion in order to ensure that the police service
will gain the support of all of Northern Ireland and which will
ensure that the police service will be multi-ethnic, fair,
accountable, free from political control, and committed to
human rights;
(7) commends the reported thousands of citizens of Ireland
and Northern Ireland who, despite the public dispute over
policing, believe in the necessity of police reform and who
responded by submitting applications to join the new police
service;
(8) stresses the importance of the beginning of real
decommissioning of weapons held by paramilitary organizations
on all sides even if it begins with a modest movement beyond
storage and without conditions to the success of the peace
process;
(9) calls o
3f5
n all sides to support the functioning of the
North/South Ministerial Council and encourages those parties to
the Good Friday Agreement who refuse to recognize full
representation to drop their opposition in the name of
progress;
(10) urges the Government of the United Kingdom to
reconsider its use of plastic bullets, to recall all existing
bullets, and to consider additional steps toward the
demilitarization of Northern Ireland; and
(11) reaffirms the bonds of friendship and cooperation that
exist between the United States and the Governments of the
United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, the continued
strong support of the United States for the Good Friday
Agreement, and the support of the United States for the
political parties who are seeking the resolution of a strong
and lasting peace in Northern Ireland.
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